BOE: The disinflation process is still ongoing – Megan Greene

The person responsible for fixing the types of the Bank of England (BOE), Megan Greene, said on Saturday that deflation in the United Kingdom will continue despite an increase in the growth of consumer prices in the short term, according to Bloomberg.

Outstanding statements

Most of the temporal increase in inflation is due to specific factors.
We hope that inflation continues to decrease until reaching the goal in the medium term.
Our opinion is that we can ignore it, but of course that is a great risk.
There is a risk that people do not even consume when rates fall.
Commercial fragmentation should be deflationary for the United Kingdom.
Looking ahead, we could see divergence in politics.

Market reaction

At the time of publication, the GBP/USD torque rises 0.07% in the day, quoting in 1,3537.

BOE FAQS


The Bank of England (BOE) decides the monetary policy of the United Kingdom. Its main objective is to achieve prices stability, that is, a constant inflation rate of 2%. Your instrument to achieve this is the adjustment of basic loan rates. The BOE sets the type to which it provides commercial banks and to which banks lend themselves to each other, determining the level of interest rates in the economy in general. This also influences the value of sterling pound (GBP).


When inflation exceeds the objective of the Bank of England, it responds by raising interest rates, which makes access to credit for citizens and companies more expensive. This is positive for sterling pound, since higher interest rates make the United Kingdom a more attractive place for world investors to invest their money. When inflation falls below the objective, it is a sign that economic growth is slowing down, and the Bank of England will consider the possibility of lowering interest rates to reduce credit in the hope that companies ask to borrow to invest in projects that generate growth, which is negative for sterling pound.


In extreme situations, the Bank of England can apply a policy called Quantitative Easing (QE). The QE is the process by which the BOE substantially increases the flow of credit in a stuck financial system. The QE is a policy of last resort when the descent of interest rates does not achieve the necessary result. The QE process implies that the Bank of England prints money to buy assets, normally state bonds or corporate bonds with AAA rating, banks and other financial institutions. Which usually translates into a weakening of the pound sterling.


The quantitative hardening (QT) is the reverse of the QE, and is applied when the economy is strengthening and inflation begins to rise. While in the QE the Bank of England (BOE) buys state and business bonds from financial institutions to encourage them to grant loans, in the QT the BOE stops buying more bonds and stops reinvesting the main one that expires of the bonds it already has. It is usually positive for sterling pound.

Source: Fx Street

You may also like