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Review of the week: Back to the shops

UK retail sales bounced back after a COVID-crushed Christmas. Yet the longest income squeeze since Sir Robert Peel was Prime Minister is set to intensify in the coming months.

21 February 2022

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Article last updated 21 February 2022.

Markets have again been very volatile, with worries to suit the proclivities of any investor. Yet there have been some glimmers of better news as well, if you can look past some of the more glaring headlines. It’s difficult to determine whether the positives or the negatives will prevail in the coming months. It’s a strange time.

The UK stock market has been doing well lately, buoyed by its larger proportion of commodities companies and ‘value’ businesses whose profits should benefit as the pandemic melts into the background. UK property prices are soaring once again. The average asking price leapt 2.3% in the month to mid-February, the largest jump since Rightmove started the measure in 2001. The average listing price of £248,800 is almost 10% higher than a year ago.

And British retail sales were unexpectedly strong in January, with a 1.9% month-on-month increase. Economists had expected a rise of just 1.0%. The surge in spending was driven mostly by people shelling out on household goods and renewed petrol sales. However, this bounce back only offsets half of December’s 4.0% fall as Omicron pushed the country back into quasi-lockdown.

Despite this ramp up in spending and the value of homes, a cost of living crisis is well underway in the UK. The annual decline in real wages could reach 3% or 4% by April as inflation rises and pay rises slow. For the average Brit, inflation-adjusted wages are lower now than they were in the first three months of 2007. This 15-year stagnation in the standard of living is the most protracted Britain has experienced since the mid-19th century. And this is unique to the UK – caused in no small part by a lot of unforced errors in economic policy.

The UK consumer confidence index is due out this week. It’s been slipping back since its peak last summer and isn’t expected to change much this month. In the coming months, we will be watching to see how UK households are feeling and spending – particularly whether they are continuing to switch from goods to services (which includes restaurants, cafes, theatre and travel). If so, this should help ease inflationary pressure, much of which is wrapped up in supernormal demand for goods in our usually services-rich economy.

There are two major factors bearing on how Brits are feeling and how they are spending. The main one is COVID-19. The government is this week due to update Parliament on the nation’s long-term strategy for living with COVID. Case numbers, hospitalisation and deaths are sharply down from December, leading to the hope that the end of the pandemic is finally in sight. The government reportedly wants to keep the infrastructure in place to quickly respond to another problem variant, yet it wants to strip away most of the testing and isolation requirements to ease staffing problems and reduce costs for the public and private sectors.

As for the other factor influencing the optimism of the British people …

 Index

1 week

3 months

6 months

1 year

FTSE All-Share

-2.0%

1.4%

3.0%

15.1%

FTSE 100

-1.8%

4.0%

6.2%

17.6%

FTSE 250

-3.1%

-9.0%

-9.6%

4.1%

FTSE SmallCap

-2.2%

-4.6%

-4.6%

11.8%

S&P 500

-1.4%

-8.0%

0.8%

15.7%

Euro Stoxx

-2.3%

-7.6%

-5.3%

8.7%

Topix

-1.2%

-6.8%

-2.4%

-4.6%

Shanghai SE

1.5%

-0.8%

3.9%

-0.3%

FTSE Emerging

-0.5%

-2.5%

2.3%

-6.2%

Source: EIKON, data sterling total return to 18 February These figures refer to past performance, which isn’t a reliable indicator of future returns. Investments can go up or down and you may not get back your original investment.

A poorer pound

The pump prices of diesel and petrol are at record highs. Both are trading at roughly £1.50 a litre, a level that drivers have never seen before.

The AA says nearly half of members it surveyed are driving less because of the soaring cost. About 30% reported they are cutting back on spending elsewhere because of the increase cost of a tank as well.

Brent Crude Oil is trading near $95 a barrel, much higher than at any point since late 2014. Of course, oil has broken $100 before. Back in 2014, it traded between $100 and $120 a barrel for most of the year. This time around, however, the pound is worth much, much less. In 2014, sterling bought between $1.50 and $1.60; today, the exchange rate is $1.35. That means the pounds and pence cost for fuel is that much higher. It’s a cruel lesson in the economics of exchange rates and the prevailing cost of globalised commodities. Filling the car is a significant expense for many people and prices at the pump tend to have a noticeable impact on people’s perception of inflation and sense of buying power. So fuel passing the $1.50/litre level, combined with soaring electricity and gas prices, may worry many families and persuade them to rein in spending.

High oil and gas prices are likely to remain for as long as the Ukraine stand-off between the West and Russia continues. The potential for supply disruption – whether by sanctions, damaged infrastructure or weaponised withholding of deliveries – will keep commodity investors on edge. This doesn’t just affect the UK, of course. European inflation is due out this week. It’s expected to remain flat at 5.1%, which is by far the highest level of this millennium.  And US inflation is 7.5%, its highest level since 1983.

The longer this global squeeze on living standards goes on, the greater the pressure on companies to raise wages. This could risk a spiral of wages and prices, however, it would be extremely unlikely for the phenomenon to be as rampant and costly as it was in the 1970s or 1980s. Today, central banks are independent and tasked with maintaining inflation at a low, healthy rate. Also, much weaker union membership makes it harder for workers to secure rapid, widespread gains in pay. And, finally, productivity growth – the ability to create more with less – may get a jump-start from the huge amount of investment businesses made during the pandemic. New ways of working might make workers more productive, businesses more profitable and therefore allow wages to rise without creating inflationary price hikes in the wider economy.

If you have any questions or comments, or if there’s anything you would like to see covered here, please get in touch by emailing review@rathbones.com. We’d love to hear from you.

View PDF version of Review of the week here.

Bonds                                                                                                                                       
UK 10-Year yield @ 1.38%
US 10-Year yield @ 1.93%
Germany 10-Year yield @ 0.21%
Italy 10-Year yield @ 1.85%
Spain 10-Year yield @ 1.21%

Economic data and companies reporting for week commencing 21 February

Monday 21 February

Full-year results: Bank of Cyprus
Interim results: Finsbury Food, Tristel, Dechra, Sylvania Platinum

Tuesday 22 February

UK: Unemployment Rate, Public Sector Net Borrowing
US: Consumer Confidence

Full-year results: HSBC, InterContinental Hotels, Smith & Nephew, Synetics, Coca-Cola HBC, Antofagasta, Thungela Resources, Bank of Georgia
Interim results: Petra Diamonds, Blancco Technology, Bluefield Solar, Springfield Properties, Hargreaves Lansdown, Oxford Cannabinoid Technologies

Wednesday 23 February

US: MBA Mortgage Applications, Crude Oil Inventories, Industrial Production

Full-year results: Rio Tinto, Irish Residential Properties, Photo-Me, Barclays, Capital & Counties, Georgia Capital
Interim results: Netcall, Avingtrans, Cap-xx

Thursday 24 February

US: New Home Sales, Continuing Claims, Initial Jobless Claims
EU: Services Sentiment, Economic Sentiment Indicator, Business Climate Indicator, Industrial Confidence, Business Confidence

Full-year results: Rathbone Group, Conduit Holdings, Derwent London, Spectris, Aston Martin Lagonda, Hikma Pharmaceuticals, Centrica, Morgan Sindall, Serco, St James Place, Inchcape, Lloyds, Howden Joinery, BAE Systems, Drax, WPP, Macfarlane Group
Interim results: Genus, Hays

Friday 25 February

US: Pending Home Sales, Personal Income, Personal Consumption Expenditure, Personal Spending

Full-year results: Evraz, Jupiter Fund Management, Pearson, Rightmove, Romgaz

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