Today.
I was looking at the £€ exchange rate, especially in the light of Wednesday's testimony by Carney, trying to work out what they are thinking. In the end the FX news seem to believe that either Carney's testimony was missed because of Trump's lack of direction on taxes, or that the markets are ignoring it and bidding the € up to punish the UK for leaving the EU.
This I think is good. The tone from the BOE and, especially, Carney, has moved from negative in November to neutral to positive in December to not only strongly positive in January but a switch away from Brexit being the biggest issue the UK has. In fact Carney was clear, Brexit is a bigger issue to the EU governments and industries; who are into UK banks for €1.1 trillion debt. So long as those governments have to continue issuing debt, then the UK banks have them at a disadvantage.
Also the ECB are clear that the outlook, whilst positive, is not going fast enough. A clear signal that they may loosen monetary control even further. Making the differential between the £ and the € even greater.
This is going to bear watching. Since late December the markets have been selling the £ down. However if you are a currency trader you ignore a Central Banker at your peril. Carney talks about forward advice and guiding the markets. But he's bound by the decision, last year, to reduce BOE MPC meetings. There won't be one in January and nobody is listening to him when he talks.
Depending on how bad this gets before Feb 2nd, the BOE may just be forced into a shock, unanticipated, rate rise. Wrong footing everyone and hammering the short traders selling the £ down. This would be like the ERM crisis where Lamont varied the deposit rates, overnight, massively, to punish the traders.
It may be that Carney thinks he has the leeway to keep rates where they are for another two months. But he's going to have to do something in March because the shock of the actual triggering of A50 is going to hammer the £ again. If he does not act to bolster it now, he's going to have to act a LOT more in April to fix the mess or his "little" inflation problem is going to become a much bigger problem requiring more pain to fix.
The spivs have it for today. I'm hoping our central banker has somewhat more Cojones than he's exhibited so far.