Investor behaviour is strongly influenced by stylised facts, i.e. the historical relationship between economic variables and financial markets. When Bund yields increase, the spread of certain sovereign issuers tends to widen. This positive correlation will be perpetuated when enough investors believe that the historical relationship continues to hold. This was again illustrated in recent weeks by the significant widening of certain sovereign spreads in reaction to the rise in Bund yields. It creates a challenge for governments, due to higher borrowing costs, but also for the ECB, because of its influence on monetary transmission. This explains the ECB’s insistence on the flexibility offered by the PEPP reinvestments.
As shown on our Pulse, the sharp increase in inflation has continued in January, with the harmonised index of consumer prices (HICP) up 6.1% y/y in January. Although the details of last month’s inflation have not yet been revealed, energy prices should remain, unsurprisingly, the main driver of higher consumer prices. The energy element of the HICP recorded a jump of 40.2% y/y in December 2021, whilst the sector’s production prices nearly doubled (+95.9% y/y) between December 2020 and December 2021.
In the UK, like elsewhere, the upsurge in inflation is proving a constant source of surprise, and is prompting the central bank to act. Annual inflation is currently over 5% and the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) expects it to hit 7% in April, its highest level for three decades. In response, the Bank of England is raising interest rates. Set at 0.1% during the crisis, its base rate was raised to 0.25% in December and then by a further quarter-point in February. Further rate hikes will follow, since the MPC, in line with market expectations, is aiming to increase the base rate to 1.50% by mid-2023.
In the week of 2-8 February 2022, 19.9 million confirmed new cases of Covid-19 were reported worldwide, 14% less than the previous week. This is the second consecutive week of decline. All regions contributed to this decline: North America (-38%), Africa (-24%), South America (-17%) and Asia and Europe (nearly -5% each).