Financial News

  • 21 February 2013, 11:30

Pound Plunges As King Loses QE Vote

The pound has plunged against key economies after it was revealed that the Bank of England boss lost a vote for an increase in monetary stimulus.

Sterling fell to fresh multi-month lows against the euro and the dollar after minutes from the BoE showed governor Sir Mervyn King wanted an increase of quantitative easing (QE) to £400bn.

The notes showed that unexpectedly three out of the nine BoE policymakers voted for an increase in asset purchases under the bank's QE programme, which currently sits at £375bn.

However, they were outvoted by the six others who preferred to keep policy unchanged.

The minutes also show that the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) considered cutting interest rates below the current historic low of 0.5%.

The pound slid to at least an 8-1/2-month low against the dollar, dropping 1.1 cents in a day and reaching $1.549.

Meanwhile the slide with the euro continued, with the pound dropping to 1.145 euros, down 1.15 cents in the day.

The FTSE 100 index peaked above 6409 after news of the MPC minutes was released and finished at 6395 - a five-year closing high as investors anticipated benefits from extra QE stimulus.

James Knightley, economist at ING bank, said it was "significant" that Sir Mervyn voted for more QE.

"Clearly, if the data disappoints, more QE will be on its way," Mr Knightley said.

The MPC meeting was held on February 6 and 7, with the governor being supported by BoE economist Paul Fisher and Professor David Miles.

The British economy has been stagnant for the past two years, and the central bank only sees sluggish future growth.

But concerns about inflation and how effective more buying of bonds or other assets would be have stayed the bank's hand.

However, the swing in the governor's views provided the sharpest divergence in views since June last year, when a split vote was followed the next month by a majority in favour of an extra £50bn of purchases.

"A case could ... be made for undertaking additional asset purchases at this meeting," the minutes said.

"The degree of slack in the economy, and the likely positive response of supply capacity to increased demand, meant that higher output growth would not necessarily lead to any material additional inflationary pressure."

More broadly, the MPC said it was willing to allow longer for inflation to fall to its target, and to consider measures to boost lending from sources other than banks.

Most economists have seen it as unlikely that the BoE would opt to try and pump yet more cash into the economy, due to persistently high inflation and doubts from King among others about further asset purchases.

The meeting was only the fourth time that the governor has been outvoted since he took office in 2003.

what do you think?

11 comments

pjbeckett

10:46am on 20/2/2013

They may as well print it, there is no other way of getting it.

Score: 6

john

10:47am on 20/2/2013

Printing money didn't work for Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe and it won't work for David Cameron in Great Britain, what was that definition of insanity? something in the way of repeating the same experiment and expecting a different result.

Score: 11

davenlesley

10:53am on 20/2/2013

I don't think ther BOE will be too bothered about the pound losing value as it makes our exports cheaper and selling stuff people want to buy at a competitive price is the way out of our current mess. Interest rates at 0.5 % for over 2 years haven't done a great deal so how will cutting them further make any difference?

Score: 10
5 replies

Mark Ashpole

12:03pm on 20/2/2013

The idea of cutting interest rates further is so people have more money in their pockets to spend and increase growth but 0.25% wont make much difference I dont think

Score: 4

davenlesley

12:24pm on 20/2/2013

Mark. Well it dosen't seem to have put much in peoples pockets over the last 2 years and it is a double edged sword. It takes money out of the pockets of those who rely on the interest their savings generate to fu nd their retirement

Score: 6

blue side

3:09pm on 20/2/2013

Surely we need to earn from exports not just domestic - it might increase the circular flow but not at the risk of increased imports

Score: 4

happymike CHESTER

5:20pm on 20/2/2013

Can some one tell me what we can export that is wholly British owned as all our exports are foreign companies not paying full taxes. I have a couple of exports ideas Dog excrement and Bull sXXX.

Score: 4

davenlesley

6:17pm on 20/2/2013

HMC. You could start with any one of the hundreds of small British manufacturing businesses who have overseas markets.

Score: 3

Name witheld

10:56am on 20/2/2013

This comment has been removed for violations of our Terms and Conditions.

Score: 1

ListenToTeacher

11:09am on 20/2/2013

Let the currency wars begin.....

Score: 4

Gordon Wright

11:59am on 20/2/2013

On the upside, I hear the pound has increased in value against the Matabele Gumbo bead......................

Score: 8
1 reply

movvi

10:54pm on 21/2/2013

Did you swap them for a cow? Or was that a horse?!

Eric Clutterbean

1:43pm on 20/2/2013

maybe all east europeans will think again before coming here

Score: 4

Brian Holmes

3:32pm on 20/2/2013

Taxes. Taxes. Taxes. The economy will never heal unless they ease the massive tax burden that is weighing down everyone from the biggest businesses to the humblest part-time workers. We are overburdened pack mules who can't get off our knees because of the weight of taxes!

Score: 4
2 replies

happymike CHESTER

5:15pm on 20/2/2013

As the rich don`t pay their taxes we have to .

Score: 4

davenlesley

6:20pm on 20/2/2013

Brian. I fear it will only get worse when old tax & spend Ed Ba lls get his hands on the pursestrings

Score: 7

happymike CHESTER

5:13pm on 20/2/2013

Time to buy Gold bars as printing money is now turning bad for savers and pensions .The trouble is these clowns running the country are buying the gold up as fast as they can ,they will be aright .

Score: 4
2 replies

Name witheld

5:18pm on 20/2/2013

This comment has been removed for violations of our Terms and Conditions.

happymike CHESTER

5:30pm on 20/2/2013

I guess that was a comment about Gordon Brown ,his gold sale. He had to bring the price down to save his Tory mates in the Banking industry,they all dived in when the price bottomed.

Score: 3

Alf Bibby

5:21pm on 20/2/2013

Why as King not been sacked a long time a go

Score: 4

john

8:01pm on 20/2/2013

Never mind, all of this QE will make us all millionaires soon, trouble is a loaf of bread will cost ten million pounds. Zimbabwe had a hundred trillion dollar banknote thanks to Mugabe's QE, you could buy a box of matches with it.

Score: 4
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