by Suff » 20 Jul 2016, 19:56
I would agree with you WM if it were not for the fact that I am an avid central bank watcher and have been for the last 20 years. Because for the last 20 years I've been in a multi currency situation where my income and expenditures have been in at least two currencies and sometimes three.
So you will forgive me for repeating that, in the last 16 years especially, the central bank communication analysis has been predicated with the following:
"Leading the market in the right direction by hinting on future policy".
"Driving the market by implied central bank action which will stop the current trend"
The whole analysis of the statements of central bankers has been about the "messaging" which is designed to prepare the markets for action.
So what was the "messaging"?
Mayhem, disaster, radical central bank action, loss of profits, loss of confidence, loss of investment.
What was the action?
Immediate moves (not words), to counteract the "pre stated" impact.
What happened? The markets went mad. Well what would we expect, they had been told the world would end so they tried to end it first so they could get away with even a modicum of profit.
Exit one PM and one Chancellor. Enter a new PM and a new chancellor.
What has happened? Rates on hold, no easing, no solid calls for action, back to normal CB practise of studying the data and making small, reasoned, actions to head off a growing trend.
End result?
Almost instant stability in the £, growth in the stock market and slow but steady appreciation of the £. The market had "priced in" a cut in rates and a lower £. Of in other words the markets shorted the £ to make a fast buck out of our misery. The Bank, under new direction, wrong footed the markets and a lot of people lost money on their short calls. Effectively killing off speculation on the £ in its tracks.
Don't tell me they weren't running to a pre planned agenda to cause instability and panic to try and overwhelm the vote. They were and it's obvious. However a new PM with the message that, come hell or high water, we're following the vote of the people and all the games come to a screeching halt.
The next 3 months will be key and my bet is that the bank does very little or even virtually nothing. I could be wrong but the further we get from the vote the less likely it is that the bank will do anything at all. If everyone just calms down then the UK will be back on track in 6 - 9 months and with a growing list of trade suitors.
I wonder when people will begin to realise that the trade deals on offer will make the $16tn of the EU look like pocket change????
Then the games will begin in earnest and they'll start in Brussels when they suddenly realise that instead of being in the driving seat they will be the passenger in the boot with the rotting garbage....
There are 10 types of people in the world:
Those who understand Binary and those who do not.