GBP/USD – UK in Recession But That’s Unlikely to Sway the BoE Yet

GBP/USD – UK in Recession But That’s Unlikely to Sway the BoE Yet

 
GBP/USD
-0.14%
  • UK GDP -0.3% in Q4 and -0.1% in December
  • BoE not concerned about recession
  • GBP/USD momentum fading near February lows?

The UK fell into recession in the second half of last year after GDP figures for the fourth quarter showed a steeper contraction than expected.

While a recession was expected ahead of the release, the fourth quarter number was slightly worse despite December performing better than anticipated.

The UK has been flirting with recession for some time but despite the inevitable headlines, today’s data doesn’t change much. The economy isn’t growing, nor has it for the bulk of the last couple of years. It’s just on this occasion it’s tipped slightly the other way and recorded two small negative quarters of growth.

Not that flat growth is anything to celebrate, of course, but many feared it would be much worse when rates started rising and increased to the level they have. The economy, like those in many other countries, has shown significant resilience and is expected to bounce back this year.

The Bank of England obviously won’t be swayed by the technical recession, as Governor Bailey alluded to earlier this week, but weaker household spending may suggest demand isn’t as strong as they anticipated. We’ll get another update on that tomorrow from the January retail sales figures.

With inflation expected to fall to target in the second quarter, maybe even further after this week’s readings, the debate around rate cuts could intensify earlier than they would have otherwise thought. Slower wage growth would obviously help that along greatly.