Posted in Credit Crunch, Housing Market, Inflation, Money, RBS, Recession on July 8th, 2008
Mark Hake, an analyst at Merrill Lynch, says the British housing market could take 20 years to recover from its current downturn.
Merrill, one of the City of London’s leading investment banks, said, in a note to clients, ” … it looks significantly worse [than the 1990 downturn], with house prices falling faster and further and very little recovery in real terms expected over 20 years. … House prices are expected to be below their August 2007 peak in a further 10 years’ time.”
The bank forecasts house prices to fall by as much as 17 per cent this year, while inflation is set to continue its upward march in coming months as the economy absorbs the effects of higher oil and food prices.
To add to the woes, David Kern, economic advisor to the British Chambers of Commerce, thinks unemployment will rise to nearly two million by the end of 2009. He commented, “The results of this survey signal a menacing deterioration in UK prospects We are now facing serious risks of recession. London appears pretty weak and it’s across the board. Businesses are in a lose-lose situation. Falling demand and the squeeze on consumer disposable incomes will limit how far prices can be increased.”
Posted in Credit Crunch, ECB, Euro, Eurozone, Inflation, Macroeconomics, Money, Recession, Stagflation on July 3rd, 2008
The European Central Bank (ECB) today defied the threat of recession in many eurozone countries and raised interest rates to their highest level for almost seven years, despite frantic political pressure.
ECB President, Jean-Claude Trichet, issued a strong warning on Wednesday that inflation in the zone could explode if left unchecked.
The decision by the ECB’s Governing Council is set against calls to hold firm from European leaders led by President Sarkozy of France. It comes after a leap in eurozone inflation to 4pc in June which set alarm bells ringing over price pressures. This was further fuelled by a rise in factory-gate producer prices within the eurozone, which jumped 1.7pc in May, to stand 7.1pc up on a year earlier. The hike was largely driven by an 18.2pc year-on-year rise in energy costs.
More depressing numbers were released today confirming that the eurozone’s services sector, which is at the heart of its economy, shrank in June for the first time since mid-2003.
Economists pointed out new indications of “stagflation” in the eurozone economy, with output contracting as price pressures continue to build. They believe that today’s interest rate increase is a single-shot for the rest of the year.
Could that be more in hope than expectation though?