Bank of England policy maker David Miles said there’s a risk a country may leave the 17-nation euro area and that the threat from the region’s crisis has increased uncertainty about the outlook for the U.K. economy.
“I don’t think any of us can feel confident one way or another about whether all the countries that are currently in the euro zone will still be in it,” Miles said in an interview on ITV broadcast late yesterday.
In the U.K., “the return to more normal rates of growth is something that is going to be a gradual process over the course of the next two years,” Miles said. “There’s plenty of risks and that might turn out to be too optimistic, that might turn out to be too pessimistic.”
The Bank of England, which restarted bond purchases in October to aid the recovery, cut its 2012 growth forecast this month by more than half. While gross domestic product rose 0.5 percent in the third quarter, the central bank said yesterday that underlying growth was probably weaker than that.
The pound was little changed against the dollar, trading at $1.5554 at 9:50 a.m. in London. The euro was at $1.3397, up 0.4 percent on the day.
European Turmoil
There are signs the turmoil is starting to affect Germany, Europe’s largest economy, after bids at a sale of securities repayable in January 2022 fell 35 percent short of the 6 billion euros ($8 billion) on offer. German 10-year bonds extended a decline today, pushing the yield on the securities as much as 10 basis points higher to 2.25 percent.
Miles said that “it’s pretty difficult to know where we’ll be even at the end of this week, let alone where we’ll be in three to six months time.”
“I wouldn’t be surprised if someone leaves the euro,” Trevor Greetham, head of asset allocation at Fidelity Worldwide Investment, told Bloomberg Television in an interview from London today. “You’d need to step in with unlimited force.”
The central bank’s nine-member Monetary Policy Committee maintained the target for its bond-purchase program at 275 billion pounds ($427 billion) this month, saying in the minutes of its decision that there was “little merit in fine tuning” while the current four-month plan was continuing.
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