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The Bank of England's shocker 150-bp cut to 3.00% (lowest level since 1955)
against expectations of 50-bp cut is the biggest rate cut since the central
bank acquired operation independence 11 years ago. The Swiss National Bank
also surprised with an unscheduled 50-bp rate cut to 1.75%. The European Central
Bank stuck with a widely expected 50-bp cut to 3.25%. ECB president JC Trichet
says the bank does not rule out further rate cuts and cannot rule out sharp
decline in inflation next year.

UK interest rates are now below those of the Eurozone for the first time
in the life of the euro. Today's 150-bp cut is a serious assault to the British
pound's central bank reserve currency role. After the BoE announcement,
GBPUSD collapsed by a full 2 cents in less than 3 minutes to $1.5710 before
jumping back by more than 3 cents towards $1.6020 and later dropping back
towards $1.5850s, as surging volatility widens price spreads and impacts
liquidity. We now expect GBPUSD to gradually find its way down towards
$1.58 and onto $1.57. There lies more downside towards $1.5350, even in the
event of further gloom in tomorrow's US jobs report.
The chart below shows sterling's trade weighted index hiting its lowest level
since November 1996. Just yesterday, the UK's National Institute of Economic
and Social Research estimated Q3 GDP to have contracted by 0.5% from an initial
estimate of a 0.2% contraction, expecting the downturn will last into 2010.

The magnitude of today's interest rate moves from UK and Switzerland
not only reflects the gravity of the financial and economic dangers in Europe
and their impact on the rest of the world, but also manifests the lateness
of UK central bank policy makers, whose inflation-focus had clouded their ability
to weigh the depth of the recession. Despite having acquired operational in
May 1997, the Bank of England remains bound to a government-imposed inflation target (not
ceiling as in case of ECB), now at 2.0%.
Pre-Jobs Central Bank Action? The global fallout from yesterdays 5%
slump in Wall Street ought to have played a role in forcing the hand of the
BoE into making todays historic move. Tomorrows US non-farm payrolls for October
are expected to show a loss of more than 220K (biggest since November 2001),
while the unemployment rate hitting a fresh 5-year high of 6.3%. A rate above
6.3% would be the highest since 1994. Yesterdays ADP report on private payrolls
showed a decline of 157K in October (highest since Nov 2002). The impact on
US and global markets of such a report could be of escalating volatility, favoring
the lower yielding currencies.
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