focusIR May 2024 Investor Webinar: Blue Whale, Kavango, Taseko Mines & CQS Natural Resources. Catch up with the webinar here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksLloyds Share News (LLOY)

Share Price Information for Lloyds (LLOY)

London Stock Exchange
Share Price is delayed by 15 minutes
Get Live Data
Share Price: 56.18
Bid: 55.94
Ask: 55.98
Change: -0.02 (-0.04%)
Spread: 0.04 (0.072%)
Open: 55.98
High: 56.30
Low: 55.80
Prev. Close: 56.20
LLOY Live PriceLast checked at -

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

Bank of England's King says time to review inflation targeting

Tue, 22nd Jan 2013 19:45

By Padraic Halpin and David Milliken

BELFAST, Jan 22 (Reuters) - The Bank of England'sinflation-targeting remit needs to be fine-tuned but should notundergo fundamental change, central bank governor Mervyn Kingsaid in a wide-ranging speech on Tuesday.

King also said the central bank was ready to restart bondpurchases or cut interest rates if needed to boost the economy,but that Britain needed more fundamental reforms if it was toexceed the "gentle recovery" which he expects for 2013.

King steps down in June, and his successor Mark Carney, whocurrently heads the Bank of Canada, has promoted long-termcommitments to low rates - which are also in favour at the U.S.Federal Reserve - as well as discussing the merits of targetingthe size of the economy in cash terms instead of inflation.

To date the Bank of England has been unenthusiastic aboutexplicit interest rate commitments - arguing its existing policyframework is clearer than other central banks'.

And finance minister George Osborne, who ultimately decidesthe bank's goals, said last month that while he welcomed debate,there would need to be a strong case for change.

However, in what is likely to be his last speech outsideLondon, King told members of Belfast's business community thatit was time for the BoE and the government to think again.

"Recent actions by central banks and governments in a numberof industrialised countries have raised questions about theframeworks within which monetary policy is being conducted," hesaid.

"In the UK, the inflation target was introduced almost 21years ago, and it has now come of age. It would be sensible toreview the arrangements for setting monetary policy," hecontinued at the Confederation of British Industry event.

The changes King appears to have in mind are relativelysmall. In the speech, a text of which was provided by hisoffice, King said Osborne may want to be more explicit about howfast the central bank is expected to return inflation to target.

Inflation has been above its 2 percent goal since December2009, and King said he expected it to remain so for most of2013. The central bank's forecasts do not see it firmly back at2 percent until the second half of 2014.

This is in line with the bank's current interpretation ofits mandate, under which it sets monetary policy to getinflation to 2 percent within 2-3 years.

King also referred to the Fed's decision to state levelswhich unemployment would probably need to fall to before itstarted to raise interest rates.

"Is there a gain from trying to quantify how the (bank's)Monetary Policy Committee should manage the trade-off betweengrowth and inflation in the short run?," King asked.

"How much discretion to give to the MPC and how much shouldremain with the Chancellor is an interesting question that wasraised, but not fully resolved, in 1997," he added, referring tothe date when the BoE gained operational independence.

Earlier on Tuesday, former MPC member Adam Posen arguedagainst both long-term policy commitments - saying markets didnot take them very seriously - and targeting nominal GDP, sayingit would lead to higher inflation than inflation-targeting.

NO POLICY PANACEA

In his comments about the more immediate outlook for Britishmonetary policy, King left his options open, though his remarksare unlikely to change economists' expectations that the centralbank will not add to its 375 billion pounds ($595 billion) ofasset purchases any time soon.

"We are ready to provide more stimulus if it is needed,"King said, adding the bank would continue to assess whether tocut interest rates again - something it has resisted since March2009 lest it hurt fragile banks or building societies.

Although inflation was likely to remain above target formost of 2013, the MPC could look past this while it was drivenby semi-regulated prices like university tuition fees ratherthan market-generated price rises, King said.

Nonetheless, more asset purchases or rate cuts would not beenough to get Britain's economy back on track.

"Relying on generalised monetary stimulus alone ... is not apanacea," King said.

Britain's economy shrank around 6 percent in the 2008-09financial crisis, and has recovered much more slowly than itspeers. Growth in the last three months of 2012 was likely tohave been "considerably weaker" than in the previous quarter,continuing a trend of zig-zagging growth rates, King said.

A more solid recovery required three things, King said,citing supply-side reforms, stronger euro zone growth andrestructuring Britain's banks.

Some banks needed more capital and others - likestate-controlled Royal Bank of Scotland and LloydsBanking Group - would benefit from selling non-coreassets and a prompt return to private ownership, King said.

"With proper implementation, there is no reason why the twobanks with significant state shareholdings could not largely beback in the private sector within a relatively short period,"King said.

More News
4 Jul 2023 07:53

LONDON BRIEFING: Sainsbury's sales up; Eurowag buys more of JITpay

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London are to open a touch lower on Tuesday, with little in the way of catalysts for global markets, given a lack of major data and a holiday in the US.

Read more
4 Jul 2023 07:24

FCA summons bank chiefs over low savings rate concerns

(Sharecast News) - The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has called on the chief executives of major banks to address concerns over the low savings rates being offered to customers, it emerged on Tuesday.

Read more
3 Jul 2023 17:15

UK banks asked by lawmakers if they're 'exploiting' savers with low rates

LONDON, July 3 (Reuters) - British banks faced fresh criticism on Monday for the savings rates they offer to cash-strapped customers, in the latest intervention by parliament's influential Treasury Select Committee.

Read more
3 Jul 2023 11:06

IN BRIEF: Capita extends revolving credit facility to end of 2026

Capita PLC - London-based process outsourcing and professional services company - Extends the maturity of its revolving credit facility by just over two years to December 31, 2026 from August 31, 2024. The available facility is for GBP284 million, reducing to GBP250 million by January 1, 2025. The facility was arranged by seven lenders. These comprised two new banking partners, Standard Chartered PLC and the London branch of Bank of China Ltd, plus five existing lenders, including Barclays Bank PLC and Lloyds Banking Group PLC. The original terms of the RCF are "substantially unchanged." Barclays acted as the coordinator for the arrangement.

Read more
3 Jul 2023 09:37

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Stifel cuts Croda International to 'hold'

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Monday morning:

Read more
3 Jul 2023 09:26

UK banks criticised by lawmakers for 'measly' savings rates

LONDON, July 3 (Reuters) - British banks faced fresh criticism on Monday for the savings rates they offer to cash-strapped customers, in the latest intervention by parliament's influential Treasury Select Committee.

Read more
30 Jun 2023 13:09

British mortgage lenders now have options in place to ease interest rate pain -FCA

LONDON, June 30 (Reuters) - Banks and building societies in Britain now have options in place to offer to mortgage customers to ease the pain of rising interest rates, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) said on Friday.

Read more
30 Jun 2023 12:39

British mortgage lenders can offer options to help ease interest rate pain -FCA

LONDON, June 30 (Reuters) - Banks and building societies in Britain can offer mortgage customers options to ease the pain of rising interest rates, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) said on Friday.

Read more
30 Jun 2023 09:39

TOP NEWS: Barratt Developments sells over 600 homes to Lloyds Banking

(Alliance News) - Barratt Developments PLC on Friday said it will sell 604 homes to Citra Living Properties Ltd for GBP168.4 million in cash.

Read more
30 Jun 2023 09:22

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Stocks rise amid strong US economic outlook

(Alliance News) - European markets opened higher on Friday, shaking off weak economic data from China and instead taking heart from stronger economic growth from the US.

Read more
30 Jun 2023 08:22

UK's Barratt looks to boost revenue with $212.6 mln homes sale deal with Citra

June 30 (Reuters) - Barratt Developments on Friday said it had agreed to sell 604 homes to Lloyds' private rental subsidiary Citra Living for 168.4 million pounds ($212.57 million) in cash, as Britain's largest housebuilder looks to diversify revenue.

Read more
30 Jun 2023 07:56

LONDON BRIEFING: Markets ponder strong US economy, slow China recovery

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London were called higher on Friday, as investors weighed conflicting economic data from the world's two largest economies.

Read more
29 Jun 2023 12:35

Intel vs Nvidia: mind the gap

STOXX Europe 600 up 0.3%

*

Read more
29 Jun 2023 11:28

What a PP, Vox-led Spain could mean for equities?

STOXX Europe 600 up 0.1%

*

Read more
29 Jun 2023 10:29

UK banks: reasons to buy on weakness

STOXX Europe 600 up 0.1%

*

Read more

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.