UK money trends satisfactory but growth at risk from inflation rise
UK monetary trends are consistent with an ongoing economic recovery but growth is likely to moderate from its recent bumper pace:
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M4 excluding intermediate other financial corporations (i.e. M4ex) rose by 2.9% annualised in the three months to October. Growth remains weak by historical standards but is sufficient to support solid nominal income expansion because of a rising trend in the velocity of circulation, caused partly by negative real interest rates. (Velocity – defined as the ratio of nominal GDP to M4ex – increased by an annual 4.4% in the third quarter.)
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Within M4ex, money holdings of private non-financial corporations rose by 6.6% annualised in the latest three months. Stripping out the overleveraged property sector, the corporate liquidity ratio (i.e. non-financial companies' sterling and foreign currency deposits divided by their bank borrowing) is at a record high in data extending back to 1998. The ratio leads business spending (i.e. fixed investment plus stockbuilding), which is up by 25.7% from a trough in the fourth quarter of last year.
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Household M4 growth – 2.6% annualised in the three months to October – continues to be depressed by a portfolio switch out of bank and building society deposits into higher-yielding investments. Retail inflows to unit trusts and OEICs totalled £24.9 billion in the 12 months to September, equivalent to 2.5% of household money holdings (October figures are released on Wednesday).
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Two considerations suggest a slowdown in GDP growth from 3.9% annualised in the second and third quarters. First, while M4ex is rising at a satisfactory pace, faster price increases – due to the coming VAT hike and higher food and energy costs – will cut real expansion, implying less monetary stimulus for economic activity. Secondly, narrow money has slowed recently, with annual M1 expansion falling from 8.3% in June to 3.0% in October.
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