Economic Calendar

Monday, July 6, 2009

Pound Falls on Report of BOE Purchases, Waning Earnings Outlook

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By Anna Rascouet

July 6 (Bloomberg) -- The pound tumbled and 10-year gilt yields fell by the most in more than two weeks on speculation the Bank of England plans further action to boost the economy and as forecasts for weakening company earnings hurt stocks.

The British currency extended its first weekly drop against the dollar in a month after the Sunday Times said the central bank may increase its program of asset purchases by 25 billion pounds ($40 billion) amid signs that the economic recovery is petering out. Government bonds rose as the FTSE 100 Index slid to the lowest level in more than two months, boosting demand for the safety of fixed-income assets.

“We’re going to see this sterling move coming further as the market gets increasingly nervous about this recovery,” said Ian Stannard, a currency strategist at BNP Paribas SA in London. “Green shoots might be premature and sterling is going to be vulnerable given its cyclical characteristics.”

The pound dropped 1.5 percent to $1.6096, the lowest level since June 9, before trading at $1.6163 as of 2:01 p.m. in London. It fell 1.9 percent to 153.94 yen and lost 0.6 percent to 86.08 pence per euro.

The U.K. currency gained 11 percent against the dollar and euro this year. In the past two weeks, it dropped more than any of the 16 major currencies as the prospects of an early revival in Europe’s second-largest economy diminish. Gross domestic product will shrink 4.3 percent this year, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said June 2.

Expanded Plan

The Shadow Monetary Policy committee, a group of economists organized by the London-based Institute of Economic Affairs, called for the government to raise the 150-billion-pound limit on the Bank of England’s asset-purchase plan, the Sunday Times reported yesterday. The newspaper didn’t say where it got the information.

“Sterling is coming under increasing pressure as the market focuses on this week’s MPC announcement and the potential expansion of the quantitative-easing program,” Paul Day, chief market analyst at MIG Investments SA in Neuchatel, Switzerland, wrote in an e-mail today. “I continue to favor sterling to underperform after its recent good run.”

The Bank of England pledged to spend 125 billion pounds buying bonds in its so-called quantitative-easing program. The central bank will purchase 3.5 billion pounds in U.K. government bonds today and a further 3 billion pounds on July 8, the day before its next interest-rate decision.

Stocks fell around the world and government bonds advanced amid growing concern earnings at the biggest companies will keep falling in the coming three months. The FTSE fell as much as 1.5 percent to 4172.33, its lowest level since April 30.

Falling Profit

The year-over-year decline in profit for Standard & Poor’s 500 Index members may narrow to 21 percent from July through September, after declines of an estimated 34 percent in the second quarter and about 60 percent in the year’s first three months, according to data compiled by S&P and Bloomberg.

The yield on the 10-year gilt declined seven basis points to 3.66 percent after falling as low as 3.64 percent. The 4.5 percent security due March 2019 rose 0.55, or 5.5 pounds per 1,000-pound face amount, to 106.79. The yield on the two-year note fell five basis points to 1.19 percent.

U.K. government bonds lost investors 0.3 percent this month, compared with a gain of 0.3 percent for U.S. debt and 0.4 percent for German securities, according to Merrill Lynch & Co.’s U.K. Gilts, U.S. Treasury Master and German Federal Governments indexes.

To contact the reporter on this story: Anna Rascouet in London at arascouet@bloomberg.net




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