Although we expect the BoE to put forward a dovish tone today, signalling that the economy still requires the current low rate policy, the question is if BoE will be able to flatten the money market curve materially from current levels. GBP has as a consequence of the lower UK market rates lost a bit of its shine recently. Hence, the negative impact on sterling from a dovish BoE today should be relatively small. Looking a few months ahead we still expect a very divergent monetary policy from the BoE and the ECB and expect EUR/GBP to fall towards 0.80 during the course of 2014. Today, however, the risk is tilted marginally to the upside for the cross.
Finally, the Norwegian GDP numbers are expected to confirm that the Norwegian economy is better that its reputation and with the support to commodity and risk currencies in general we expect EUR/NOK to edge lower today. Norwegian growth slowed in 2013 due to weak growth in consumer spending, lower growth in housing investment and a weaker contribution from oil investment but there are no signs of any serious downturn in the Norwegian economy, as the fundamentals are still sound. We expect mainland GDP to grow 0.5% q/q in Q4, which is marginally higher than projected by Norges Bank in the December monetary policy report (0.43%) and the market (0.4% q/q). This would underline the absence of any need to cut interest rates in Norway and would also support NOK. The numbers comes one day ahead of the annual address by Governor Olsen tomorrow night. Given the market still price a probability of a rate cut in Norway Olsen might in fact sound a bit more upbeat. But note that the annual address has not really been a market mover the last couple of years.
