We expect the BoE to cut rates in November, even if a Brexit deal is reached by October.UK sovereign bond (gilts) yields have fallen this year, with the 10-year yield dropping by 59 basis points (bps) to 0.69%1, in concert with other core sovereign bond yields. The Brexit saga, along with the global slowdown forcing many central banks to turn dovish, are the main factors behind this steep fall.Taking stock of this context, we now expect the Bank of England (BoE) to cut rates by 25 bps at its November meeting in our central scenario, where a no-deal Brexit is avoided in October. As market participants are only pricing in 5 bps of cuts by the end of this year, we expect the UK 10-year inflation-linked yield to continue falling towards -2.7%.Headline inflation has come down in the UK in
Topics:
Laureline Chatelain considers the following as important: Bank of England, Brexit, Gilts, Macroview, UK sovereign bond
This could be interesting, too:
Marc Chandler writes The Dollar Remains Bid, While the Euro and Swiss Franc are Sold Through Last Week’s Lows
Marc Chandler writes Searching for Direction
Marc Chandler writes Serenity Now
Marc Chandler writes FX Becalmed Ahead of the Weekend and Next Week’s Big Events
We expect the BoE to cut rates in November, even if a Brexit deal is reached by October.
UK sovereign bond (gilts) yields have fallen this year, with the 10-year yield dropping by 59 basis points (bps) to 0.69%1, in concert with other core sovereign bond yields. The Brexit saga, along with the global slowdown forcing many central banks to turn dovish, are the main factors behind this steep fall.
Taking stock of this context, we now expect the Bank of England (BoE) to cut rates by 25 bps at its November meeting in our central scenario, where a no-deal Brexit is avoided in October. As market participants are only pricing in 5 bps of cuts by the end of this year, we expect the UK 10-year inflation-linked yield to continue falling towards -2.7%.
Headline inflation has come down in the UK in 2019, printing at 2.0% in June, off the 3.0% level reached at the beginning of 2018. Despite this, the 10-year inflation breakeven yield has remained high at 3.3%2, probably due to sterling’s recent weakness and rising wage growth.
Overall, we expect the 10-year gilt yield to fall further towards 0.5% by year-end in our central scenario (50%). Should growth be sufficiently robust for the BoE not to cut rates, it could rise towards 0.8% (10% probability). Should a ‘no-deal’ Brexit take place on October 31 (40% probability), then it could fall towards 0.0%, due to a significant easing package from the BoE and a global safe-haven asset rally, despite a jump in inflation expectations linked to a weaker sterling.