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  1. GBP: Wage data not as hawkish as it looks

    GBP: Wage data not as hawkish as it looks

    The UK has just released wage and employment data. On the face of it, an as-expected 7.8% three-month/year-on-year rise in ex-bonus weekly earnings in July makes the case for the Bank of England to remain hawkish.

    But here is what our UK economist, James Smith, thinks of the data. 

     

    The UK wage numbers are actually more dovish than they look at first glance. At the headline level, regular pay growth stayed at 7.8% on a 3M/YoY basis- - no surprises there. But drill down and if you strip out the public sector, private sector pay barely increased in level terms between June and July. And if we look at the altnerative wage measure based on payrolls, that actually fell in level terms for the second consecutive month. It is only one data point, admittedly, and several upside surprises preceded it. But with unemployment notching higher, the labour market data doesn't scream a need to keep hiking rates much further.


    We think it right not to chase EUR/GBP too much lower on this data (it is currently reversing from a brief dip to 0.8570) and what could prove a mildly hawkish ECB on Thursday warns of EUR/GBP breaking above 0.8600 later this week.


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