UK: Defence spending cost-neutral, but small fiscal stimulus

Feb-25 13:39
  • Increase defence spending to 2.5% of GDP by 2027. Starmer said that equates to GBP13.4bln more every year on defence from 2027. Previously the target date assumed by the OBR (in its October EFO) was that this would be met by 2029-30 and the OBR noted that this would cost GBP17bln in the final year.
  • He also said that when including intelligence spending, this would be 2.6% of GDP by 2027 (but gave no costings for this).
  • The government has said "it'll be putting in place a new defence reform and efficiency plan" led by my the Chancellor and the Defence Secretary.
  • Starmer says that this would be fully funded by reducing ODA (overseas development assistance i.e. aid) spending to 0.3% of GNI in 2027 (from 0.5%).
  • Note that in October the OBR estimated that the cost to increase the ODA budget to 0.7% of GNI (from 0.5% of GNI) would be GBP6.7bln. As this will now be reduced to 0.3 % of GNI (i.e. 0.4ppt below the 0.7% end of parliament previous target), you do indeed get to the GBP13.4bln Starmer said would be spent on defence.
  • So the numbers do seem to add up at first glance.
  • However, despite the "commitment" to increase defence spending to 3% of GDP in the next parliament, there appears to be no increase in the final two years of this parliament beyond the 2.5% of GDP fully committed to today. And with the fiscal rules not currently looking that far into the future, this 3% spending commitment should not really impact any near-term spending decisions or the fiscal "headroom".
  • Defence spending will likely be focused much more domestically than foreign aid (assuming the UK does not import too many foreign-built munitions, equipment etc). And hence despite net-net having little overall fiscal impact, this would be a marginal fiscal stimulus for the UK economy.
  • Enough to change the outlook for monetary policy? Not hugely, and not in the very near-term at least.

Historical bullets

AUSSIE 10-YEAR TECHS: (H5) Resistance Remains Intact

Jan-24 23:15
  • RES 3: 96.501 - 76.4% of the Mar 14 - Nov 1 ‘23 bear leg
  • RES 2: 96.207 - 61.8% of the Mar 14 - Nov 1 ‘23 bear leg
  • RES 1: 95.615/851 - High Dec 31 / High Dec 11 
  • PRICE: 95.510 @ 15:51 GMT Jan 24
  • SUP 1: 95.275 - Low Nov 14  (cont) and a key support 
  • SUP 2: 94.477 - 1.000 proj of the Dec 11 - 23 - 31 price swing
  • SUP 3: 94.495 - 1.0% 10-dma envelope

The Aussie 10-yr futures contract continues to trade below the Dec 11 high of 95.851, and has traded through the Dec low. A stronger bearish theme would expose 95.275, the Nov 14 low and a key support. Clearance of this level would strengthen a bearish theme. For bulls, a confirmed reversal and a breach of 95.851, the Dec 11 high, would instead reinstate a bull cycle and refocus attention on resistance at 96.207, a Fibonacci retracement point.  

FED: MNI Fed Preview-Jan 2025: Keeping Rate Cut Hope Alive

Jan-24 21:35

We've just published our preview of the January FOMC meeting:

FedPrevJan2025.pdf

  • The FOMC will keep the benchmark Fed funds rate on hold on January 29 for the first time in four meetings, as it shifts to a more patient phase of its easing cycle after delivering 100bp of cuts.
  • The forward guidance adopted in December points to a data-dependent approach to assessing the “extent and timing” of additional rate adjustments. To this end, there has been only limited inflation and labor market data since then, while the Trump administration’s policies and their potential impact on the economic outlook are still in a formative stage.
  • With minimal Statement changes expected and no new rate/macro projections, the focus will be on Chair Powell’s press conference which will likely repeat the same themes heard six weeks earlier.
  • As such, the risks to the market reaction to the meeting lean slightly dovish in the context of only one more full rate cut being priced for the cycle.
  • While he won’t be able to add any additional commentary on the Fed’s response to prospective fiscal/trade/immigration policy shifts, we suspect Powell will remain optimistic on the inflation trajectory and reiterate that 50bp of cuts remain the FOMC’s baseline scenario this year. In other words, the bias toward easing remains intact.
  • Additionally, Powell probably won’t completely rule out another cut as soon as the next meeting in March, while being careful to couch any future moves as data- and outlook- dependent, and emphasizing that the Fed can afford to be patient so long as the economy and labor market remain solid.

Note to readers: MNI’s separate preview of sell-side analyst summaries to follow on Monday Jan 27 

 

MACRO ANALYSIS: MNI US Macro Weekly: Fed Remains Firmly On Track To Hold

Jan-24 21:34
  • Data in the week ahead of the January Fed meeting was thin and overall mixed, with President Trump’s apparently softer tone on tariffs helping implied rates soften slightly toward end-week.
  • January’s preliminary Services PMI reading unexpectedly fell to its lowest since April 2024, though had some slightly less dovish details.
  • Weekly continuing claims provided a surprise on the weak side, just exceeding recent highs, but the broad report (including initial claims a touch higher than expected) didn’t materially change the story of firms dampening down on re-hiring rather than turning to layoffs to manage headcount.
  • Looking ahead to next week, the FOMC will keep the benchmark Fed funds rate on hold on January 29 for the first time in four meetings. With minimal Statement changes expected and no new rate/macro projections, the focus will be on Chair Powell’s press conference.
  • He won't totally rule out a cut at the next meeting in March, but he’ll probably reiterate that the Fed can remain patient on its next move until receiving more clarity on both inflation data and the government policy outlook (i.e. not until later in the year). Markets continue to price between 1 and 2 cuts by end-2025.
  • Aside from Tuesday’s preliminary durable goods report, data for the coming week is backloaded with the highlights being the first estimate of real GDP growth in Q4 on Thursday before the monthly PCE report for December on Friday.


PLEASE FIND THE FULL REPORT HERE: 

US macro weekly_250124.pdf