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Inflation Report August 2019

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In order to maintain price stability, the Government has set the Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) a target for the annual inflation rate of the Consumer Prices Index of 2%. Subject to that, the MPC is also required to support the Government’s economic policy, including its objectives for growth and employment. The Inflation Report is produced quarterly by Bank staff under the guidance of the members of the Monetary Policy Committee. It serves two purposes. First, its preparation provides a comprehensive and forward-looking framework for discussion among MPC members as an aid to our decision-making. Second, its publication allows us to share our thinking and explain the reasons for our decisions to those whom they affect. Although not every member will agree with every assumption on which our projections are based, the fan charts represent the MPC’s best collective judgement about the most likely paths for inflation, output and unemployment, as well as the uncertainties surrounding those central projections. This Report has been prepared and published by the Bank of England in accordance with section 18 of the Bank of England Act 1998. The Monetary Policy Committee: Mark Carney, Governor Ben Broadbent, Deputy Governor responsible for monetary policy Jon Cunliffe, Deputy Governor responsible for financial stability Dave Ramsden, Deputy Governor responsible for markets and banking Andrew Haldane Jonathan Haskel Michael Saunders Silvana Tenreyro Gertjan Vlieghe

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Get Ready for a Weaker U.S. Dollar... And Stronger Gold

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Unemployment in the U.S. is at a half-century low and the S&P 500 is trading at near-record highs. Nevertheless, the Federal Reserve today trimmed interest rates for the first time since the financial crisis on stalled manufacturing growth and an anticipated world economic slowdown.

The easing cycle may be the catalyst gold needs to outperform the market and retrace its monster bull rally in the 2000s, according to Bloomberg Intelligence strategist Mike McGlone.

“Gold prices appear on a similar launchpad as 2001 when the Fed began an easing cycle,” McGlone writes in a note dated July 29. “The greatest bull market of this millennium so far began about the time of that first rate cut, following an extended gold-price downdraft and rally in the dollar.”

With the Fed having locked in a rate cut, the question now is: What happens in the months to come? Is this simply a one-off, or is it indeed the start of a new easing cycle?

Markets appear to have priced in three cuts by year-end. As a result, I would expect to see the dollar trade lower, which in turn should allow the price of gold—the classic anti-dollar—to soar.

As I shared with you earlier in the month, a weaker greenback is one of three “key ingredients” for a gold bull market, according to research firm Alpine Macro, the other two being a more accommodative Fed (check) and rising geopolitical risk

As Europe faces prospects that negative rates might become a long-term fixture in the euro region, concerns are mounting in the U.S. that a global slide toward negative yields could infect the market for Treasury securities, should the U.S. slip into a recession,” writes Guggenheim Investments Chief Investment Officer Scott Minerd. “These concerns are well founded.”

Minerd reminds readers that, during economic slowdowns in the past, the Fed reduced rates by an average of 5.5 percentage points. Today, as you well know, we don’t have those 5.5 percentage points—unless rates were allowed to fall below zero.

Yields turning negative here in the U.S., as they have in Europe, Japan and elsewhere, would mark the start of a “paradigm shift” that billionaire hedge fund manager Ray Dalio alluded to in a recent LinkedIn post.

According to Dalio, lower-for-longer rates and other unorthodox monetary policies “will produce more negative real and nominal returns that will lead investors to increasingly prefer alternative forms of money (e.g., gold) or other storeholds of wealth.”

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US Dollar Rallies on Better-Than-Expected Q2 GDP

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The US dollar is rallying against a basket of currencies to close out the trading week, driven by a better-than-expected but slower than usual second-quarter economic report. The gross domestic product cooled down in the April-to-June period, but there were some bright spots in the overall report, including a surge in consumer spending.

According to the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA), the gross domestic product advanced a 2.1% annual clip in the second quarter, down from 3.1% in the first three months of 2019. This was higher than the market forecast of 1.9%.

Despite the disappointment behind the report, a deep dive into the numbers do paint somewhat of a positive portrait of the US economy from a consumer standpoint. In the April-to-June period, consumer spending surged 4.3%, driven by greater automobile, food, and apparel purchases. But it was not good news for businesses because fixed investment slipped 0.8%, investment dropped 11%, spending on equipment edged up just 1%, and outlays fell 1.5%.

Researchers say that if inventories would have remained neutral instead of declining $44.3 billion, then the economy would have expanded at a 3% rate in the second quarter.

Elsewhere in the report, the trade deficit impacted GDP as imports decreased and exports soared 5.2%. Federal government spending spiked 5%. Inflation, using the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) index, clocked in at a 1.4% pace year over year. 

Researchers say that if inventories would have remained neutral instead of declining $44.3 billion, then the economy would have expanded at a 3% rate in the second quarter.

Elsewhere in the report, the trade deficit impacted GDP as imports decreased and exports soared 5.2%. Federal government spending spiked 5%. Inflation, using the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) index, clocked in at a 1.4% pace year over year.

Since Federal Reserve officials have made public their concern about a potential slowdown, the latest economic figures could push the Eccles Building to impose a 25-basis-point cut to interest rates from the current target range of 2.25% to 2.50%. More than half the market anticipates two rate cuts this year, according to the CME Group FedWatch tool.

Although this report does suggest that the US economy might expand more slowly in the second half of 2019, some financial institutions believe that this is just a slight bump in the road. Goldman Sachs is prognosticating that growth will return to normal in the second half.

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