Angela Monaghan 

Bank of England’s Vlieghe: no-deal Brexit could mean near zero interest rates – as it happened

Policymaker Gertjan Vlieghe said rates might have to be cut to virtually zero if the UK crashes out of the EU without a deal
  
  

Gertjan Vlieghe,  a member of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee, speaks at the London office of newswire Thomson Reuters on Friday
Gertjan Vlieghe, a member of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee, speaks at the London office of newswire Thomson Reuters on Friday
Photograph: Henry Nicholls/Reuters

Closing summary

The big corporate news of the day is that Thomas Cook is in advanced talks to receive a £750m bailout from its largest shareholder - China’s Fosun - and its main bank lenders.

The equity injection would allow the debt-ridden travel company continue trading through winter.

Chief executive Peter Fankhauser said that while it wasn’t the desired outcome, it was the only option left. Existing shareholdings will be diluted, and shares hit a record low of 7p.

On the economics front, there was very little data today, but Bank of England rate-setter Gertjan Vlieghe made up for it by telling an audience in London that interest rates might have to be cut to virtually zero in the event of a no-deal Brexit.

He also said that the Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee - of which he is one of nine members - should publish its own preferred interest rate, rather than continue to make market expectations the focus of its forecasts.

The business secretary Greg Clark issued his own no-deal Brexit warning, telling fellow Conservatives to do all they can to avoid it. If they don’t, “many thousands” of UK jobs will be lost, he said.

Markets in the US have hit fresh record highs on heightened expectations of an imminent rate cut, and that has boosted sentiment in Europe too.

That said, the FTSE 100 is up just three points, or 0.04%, at 7,512.

That’s all for today, thank you for all the comments and do join us again on Monday. Have a good weekend. AM

US producer prices picked up by just 0.1% June, suggesting wider inflationary pressures are weak, according to Michael Pearce, senior US economist at Capital Economics:

The small gain in producer prices in June suggests the increase in tariffs on $200bn of imports from China has yet to generate a pick-up in inflation and confirms that underlying domestic inflationary pressures remain subdued.

That should help ease any fears, following the June CPI figures released yesterday, that underlying consumer price inflation will rise back above 2%.

Dow hits record high on hopes of a rate cut

Wall Street is open and the Dow Jones and S&P 500 have both hit record highs, after comments from Fed chairman Jerome Powell boosted expectations of a US rate cut this month.

  • Dow Jones: +0.2% at 27,139
  • S&P 500: 0.1% at 3,003
  • Nasdaq: 0.2% at 8,209

Figures published earlier showed industrial production in the eurozone increased by 0.9% in May, beating economists’ expectations of a 0.2% rise.

Chris Hare, economist at HSBC, said that although it was better than expected, the broader trend remains soft.

He says:

Good news is good news, and it’s fair to say that May’s bounce in the eurozone ... was materially stronger than we had expected. But there are a couple of caveats worth mentioning in the form of erratic factors. First, German car production, which has been highly volatile recently, rose by 7.4% m-o-m. Second, there was a 3.6% m-o-m increase in transport equipment output in France, possibly relating to aircraft production, which can be lumpy. Strength in both these sub-categories is unlikely to be sustained in June.

Meanwhile, the broader trend remains soft. The level of production in the eurozone, Germany and Italy is still below levels seen at the start of 2018. And output would need to grow by 0.2% in June - despite the possible unwinding of erratic factors - to achieve positive growth in Q2 as a whole. What’s more, the eurozone manufacturing PMI remains in contractionary territory, notably in June where world trade tensions escalated - that could pose a risk to the ‘hard’ data in the coming months .

In other words, one swallow doesn’t make a summer. And we want to see a more sustained recovery to feel confident that headwinds from global trade weakness will not prove too damaging. We suspect the ECB will take a similar view.

A cryptocurrency exchange in Tokyo has halted services after it lost $32m (£25m) in the latest apparent hack on volatile virtual monies.

Full story here:

Bank of England policymaker Gertjan Vlieghe has won support today for suggesting the MPC should publish its own preferred interest rate, rather than focusing its forecasts on the market’s expectations for rates.

Professor Costas Milas of Liverpool University’s Management School, has written in on the point:

MPC Member Gertjan Vlieghe suggested that the Bank of England’s Inflation Report should publish its preferred path of interest rates. Currently, the Bank’s Inflation Report conditions its inflation and output growth forecasts on two alternative scenarios: (a) the current interest rate (which stays the same in the future) and (b) an interest rate moving up or down in line with the expectations of financial markets.

Nevertheless, as my colleague Michael Ellington and I have recently argued, the Bank’s forecasting record under the assumption of constant interest rates is pretty weak. The same holds under the assumption of interest rates moving in line with market expectations.

Even worse, market expectations of interest rates are often at odds with the Bank’s repeated message that interest rates will rise gradually over the next 2 to 3 years.

With this in mind, the Bank is currently facing an embarrassing situation where it produces forecasts based on what others (the markets, that is) believe. Would it not make more sense for the Bank to provide forecasts based on what it actually thinks itself as the most appropriate interest rate?

Deutsche Bank has scaled back its redundancy packages for laid off City workers, according to a report in Financial News.

The German bank is offering less generous terms compared with previous rounds of redundancy, the report claims:

Deutsche is offering staff affected by its latest round of sweeping job cuts a package of statutory redundancy pay plus a one-off payment of less than 10% of salary, according to people familiar with matter. They are also being paid for notice periods — typically three months — which is taxable.

Those in the first wave have received less than the German lender has historically paid out, according to people affected and recruiters. Deutsche has traditionally paid a lump sum that amounts to around a month’s salary for every year of service, former staff at the bank and employment lawyers told Financial News.

Deutsche Bank boss reprimands executives over £12,000 suit fittings

Deutsche Bank chief executive Christian Sewing has spoken out after it emerged that top executives at its City of London office were fitted for £12,000 suits on the day that thousands of the bank’s staff lost their jobs.

Tailors from Fielding & Nicholson, an upmarket tailor, were pictured walking out of the bank’s office with suit bags on Monday. The men were initially assumed to be workers who had been made redundant.

Sewing told the German newspaper Handelsblatt that he had personally reprimanded those executives involved:

That someone would let a tailor come on such a day is disrespectful. In no way is this behaviour in keeping with our values.

I assume in any case that the two colleagues will not forget my telephone call.

Greg Clark: no-deal Brexit would destroy thousands of jobs

The business secretary Greg Clark has urged his fellow Conservatives to do everything possible to avoid a no-deal Brexit, warning that it would lead to the loss of “many thousands” of jobs.

He said MPs should “strain every sinew” to avoid crashing out of the EU under the next prime minister, with leadership rivals Boris Johnson and Jeremy Hunt both saying they would be prepared to leave the bloc on 31 October without a deal.

He told Sky News:

It’s evident that if you have the disruption that comes from a no-deal Brexit there will be people that will lose their jobs. It’s many thousands of jobs. Everyone knows that.

I think every person that considers the evidence that companies have given – whether it’s in the automotive sector, whether it’s in the food sector, whether it’s in aerospace, in industries up and down the country – you know if you become less efficient and your ability to trade is impeded, then of course losing your competitiveness means there will be jobs lost.

Equity markets are fairly subdued across Europe this morning:

  • FTSE 100: +0.3% at 7,530
  • Germany’s DAX: -0.1% at 12,322
  • France’s CAC: +0.5% at 5,577
  • Italy’s FTSE MIB: +0.3% at 22,237
  • Spain’s IBEX: +0.1% at 9,289
  • Europe’s STOXX 600:

It’s fair to say there hasn’t been a huge response from currency traders to Vlieghe’s speech and his assertion that UK interest rates could be cut to virtually zero in the event of a no-deal Brexit.

The pound is up 0.07% against the dollar at $1.2535, and up 0.1% against the euro at €1.1131.

The full speech from MPC member Gertjan Vlieghe:

Gertjan Vlieghe: Bank should publish its preferred path for interest rates

Gertjan Vlieghe’s speech this morning was ostensibly about how the Bank of England could improve its communication of monetary policy to the wider public.

He said the Monetary Policy Committee should publish its own preferred interest rate, rather than continue to make market expectations the focus of its forecasts.

I have argued today that publishing an MPC forecast based on a preferred path for policy, rather than based on a market path, would be a further improvement in our communications.

Our current forecasting approach is unnecessarily complex, and at times, the growth and inflation forecasts are not consistent with the MPC’s objectives, and not consistent with the MPC’s intended actions.

Publishing an outlook for growth and inflation consistent with the MPC’s best collective view of the preferred path of interest rates would be easier for us to communicate and easier for others to understand.

Since many other central banks have, by now, preceded us in this approach, we have been able to learn from their experience that commonly perceived problems with the preferred path approach can be overcome or have not materialised elsewhere.

Bank of England's Vlieghe: no-deal Brexit could mean near zero rates

The Bank of England might have to cut interest rates to virtually zero if Britain crashes out of the EU without a deal, and it is not clear how long it would take for them to rise again.

That is the verdict of Gertjan Vlieghe, a member of the Bank of England’s nine-strong Monetary Policy Committee.

Speaking at the London office of Thomas Reuters, Vlieghe said:

On balance I think it is more likely that I would move to cut Bank Rate towards the effective lower bound of close to 0% in the event of a no-deal scenario.

It is highly uncertain when I would want to reverse these interest rate cuts.

Interest rates are already ultra low, at 0.75%, but the record low was 0.25% in the aftermath of the Brexit aftermath, when the MPC felt an emergency response was necessary.

Thomas Cook boss: no guarantees on jobs

The Guardian’s Kalyeena Makortoff reports:

The boss of Thomas Cook has been speaking to journalists and insists a deal with Fosun is the best (and only?) option to keep the company trading.

It is not clear what, if any, impact the reorganisation of the group will have on its 22,000 employees, but Peter Fankhauser said he could offer no guarantees:

That is up to Fosun then to decide... the priority is no to complete the recapitalisation of the business.

What happens to jobs? Today’s announcement is really about a plan that ensures the business to continue to trade and operate as normal, and the deal preserves our brand with a sustainable balance sheet, giving us the stability to invest and grow our business.

So that is principally really good news for our employees, that is a very sensitive discussions to get to this point, what we have announced today so we did not engage with wider stakeholders like unions, which will happen now.

Here’s our full story on Thomas Cook:

To put Thomas Cook’s woes into context, it has a market value of around £200m and net debts of £1.25bn.

As Neil Wilson, chief analyst at markets.com, says, “it’s desperate times”. He adds:

Thomas Cook largest shareholder Fosun is in advanced talks with management over a deal that would effectively hand over the company to the Chinese firm.

Shareholders face significant dilution – basically it’s wipe out time. They can take part in the recapitalisation alongside Fosun should they so choose...

Thomas Cook shares hit record low

News of a deal with Fosun has gone down badly with investors and Thomas Cook shares have hit a record low of 7.5p in early trading, down 44%.

Under the terms of the deal, the shareholding of existing investors will be diluted. The sell off also reflects the cautious tone from Thomas Cook, which highlighted an uncertain consumer backdrop, “particularly in the UK”. It expects earnings in the second half of the year to be behind the same period last year.

The holiday group also cancelled its third-quarter trading update:

All future reporting dates, as previously disclosed, are now under review pending the outcome of the recapitalisation of the Group. As a result, the third quarter trading update originally scheduled for 18 July 2019 is cancelled.

Fosun has issued a statement on its plans to inject capital and take a bigger stake in Thomas Cook:

Fosun is a shareholder in Thomas Cook, because it is a British company operating in the global travel industry, in which we have extensive experience.

We are committed investors, with a proven track record of turning around iconic brands including ClubMed and Wolverhampton Wanderers FC.

Thomas Cook boss Peter Fankhauser has been speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme and says a deal with Fosun is the “best available option for us”.

He added:

It secures the value for our employees, for our suppliers and as well for our customers and that is the main focus that we have.

This is a very good option to secure the business and to put the business on the solid financial footing for the future.

Thomas Cook in rescue talks with China's Fosun

Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of the world economy, the financial markets, the eurozone and business.

Thomas Cook has confirmed this morning that is in talks with its largest shareholder and the owner of Club Med, China’s Fosun, over a rescue deal.

Britain’s oldest package holiday company, which has been struggling with a large debt pile and weaker trading, said it was in “advanced discussions” with Fosun, which -together with Thomas Cook’s core lending banks - inject £750m into the firm, allowing it to keep trading over the winter season.

The deal would give Fosun a large majority of the tour operator business and a large minority stake in its airline, diluting the shareholding of existing investors.

Chief executive Peter Fankhauser said the deal would secure a future for the business, its customers and its employees:

After evaluating a broad range of options to reduce our debt and to put our finances onto a more sustainable footing, the board has decided to move forward with a plan to recapitalise the business, supported by a substantial injection of new money from our long-standing shareholder, Fosun, and our core lending banks.

While this is not the outcome any of us wanted for our shareholders, this proposal is a pragmatic and responsible solution which provides the means to secure the future of the Thomas Cook business for our customers, our suppliers and our employees.

Also coming up:

  • 9.30am BST: Bank of England policymaker Gertjan Vlieghe speaks in London
  • 10am BST: Eurozone industrial production figures for May
  • 1.30pm BST: US producer prices inflation data for June

Updated

 

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