Subject: Let's be clear ... the talks are going well ...

View this email online if it doesn't display correctly
                                                                                                       Saturday 21st October 2017
Hi Friend,
Let's be clear ... the talks are going well ...
"I'm very clear: I have no idea what Theresa May is talking about"  claimed Michael Deacon in the Daily Telegraph this week. Patrick Kidd, Political Sketch writer in The Times was equally flustered. "One thing is clear, we are confused. Does anyone have the foggiest idea how it is going?" he asks. It's a good question.

The Prime Minster outlined her thoughts on leaving the EU without a deal. "As I have said and others have said, it would be irresponsible for the British Government not to look across at the changes that would be necessary, regardless of the eventuality, and indeed some of the changes that would be necessary in the event of a no deal would be the same as changes that would be made in relation to us achieving a deal". Excellent.

In the Commons two weeks ago, when asked if new EU laws would apply in Britain during the transition period, the Prime Minister was equally clear " Given the way things operate, it is highly unlikely that anything brought forward during that period that has not already started discussions through the European Union to which we are being party of until we leave and on which we would have been able to say whether they would be a rule that we would sign up to or a rule that we would not wish to sign up to". Mmmm. [Verbatim quotes from Michael Deacon]. Confused? You should be.

Should we worry? Well Yes. Mrs May has emphasised we will all still be friends after the divorce in 2019. The PM wants a "strong and successful EU working alongside a confident outward looking Britain". A truly global Britain in which Liam Fox will resurrect the 16th Century Board of Trade and Chris Grayling will have us grow more food in his "Back to the Allotment Dig for Victory" appeal. We will join NAFTA, The TPP and the Melbourne Chamber of Commerce. It's going to be great, making Great Britain Great Again!

According to a poll by BMG research this week, 76% think the negotiations are going badly. 12% think they are going well. Slightly down on the 15% who thought may delivered a great speech at conference this month. Ah the resilience of the British people and the Tory hard right.

Theresa May was left talking to the plants this week, the real talks were underway in the "Big room" next door. The EU offered a concession. They may be prepared to move to the next phase of talks as early as December, as long as Boris Johnson doesn't make the trip to Brussels.

Meanwhile Lloyd Blankfein head of Goldman Sachs tweeted this week "He looks forward to spending more time in Frankfurt". May should take a leaf from Prince Charles' greenhouse, he didn't just talk to the plants, he would instruct them! Maybe then we might see real progress!
Economics news this week ...
Latest inflation figures were released on Tuesday, the headline rate CPI hit 3.0% in September, goods inflation increased to 3.2%, core service sector inflation remained steady at 2.7%. Fish and book price increases were in double figures, the price of Butter is mounting. It is healthy to eat butter again, with fish, reading a good novel presumably.

Manufacturing prices were up by 3.3%, input costs were up by 8.4%. The latter driven higher by the prices of oil, imported metals and home food costs. The Governor had warned of an imminent rate rise last week. The inflation data pushed Sterling higher, the rate rise loomed large.

Then came the jobs data on Wednesday, unemployment fell, vacancies increased. The low pay mystery continued. Overall pay in the UK increased by just 2.2%. Private sector pay increased by 2.4%, driven higher by a surge in business and financial service sector pay. The prospects of an imminent rate rise abated slightly. The pressure on real earning would hit household spending. Or would it?

Retail sales increased by just 1.2% in volume terms in September. The value of sales increased by 4.4%. Online sales increased by 14% accounting for 17% of all retail sales. 2,000 job losses were announced at Sainsbury, bringing the total job losses in the sector to over 20,000 so far this year. Huge structural changes are taking place as a result of the changes in retail dynamics.

So should we worry about household spending? Not just yet. Retail spending will be around 4.5% in Q3. The strong jobs market continues. Don't worry about productivity or low pay, the market will self correct at it's own pace. Revenues will continue to flow into the state coffers.

So it proved with the release of government borrowing figures for the first half of the year. Public sector borrowing decreased by £0.7 billion to £5.9 in September ... the lowest September for ten years. Year to date spending was £32.5 billion, down by £2.5 billion prior year.

The OBR is forecasting a deficit of £58 billion in the current year. Simple extrapolation would suggest £42 billion would be nearer the mark. Just as well. Net debt is £1.8 trillion up by £140 billion on last year. The OBR will revise figures ahead of the budget next month. No matter the quantum, the funding challenge for Treasury and the Debt Management Office will continue ... a rate rise can only assist the process ...
West Wing WTF ... "Trump outrage continues" ...
Trump was extolling the virtues of his social media network this week. With a combined reach of almost 120 million on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram, the President is able to force the news agenda, bypassing the "Fake News" media.

On Friday, he tweeted " United Kingdom crime rises by 13% annually amid spread of Radical Islamic Terrorism". Not good, we must keep America safe.

It was nonsense of course but provided a distraction to the unpleasant debacle about Trump calls to families of war victims. Asked had calls to the families of the men lost in Niger been made, Trump indicated he had not already made the calls. “I will at some point during the period of time,” he said.

Those notifications are “a very difficult thing,” “It gets to a point where you make four or five of them in one day, it’s a very, very tough day.” Tougher still on the families!

Trump tried to make the claim that he was actually much better at this solemn duty than anyone else, especially Barack Obama. “If you look at President Obama and other presidents, most of them didn’t make calls, a lot of them didn’t make calls,” he said, absolutely falsely. “I like to call when it’s appropriate, when I think I’m able to do it.”

Trump admitted under further questioning at a news conference in the White House Rose Garden that he didn’t actually know what Barack Obama’s practice was. Obama frequently made calls, always wrote letters and regularly met with Gold Star families.

When he did make the call, Trump created more problems. "He knew what he was signing up for" he consoled the widow of Army Sergeant David Johnson. A Twitter row broke out with Democrat Congressman Frederica Wilson about the whole sorry mess.

“We’re doing a lot of great things,” the president said at the start of a Cabinet meeting this week. "We are getting tremendous accolades for what we’re doing.” Excellent.

That's all from the West Wing WTF this week. Much more to come in the coming weeks ...
© 2017 John Ashcroft, Economics, Strategy and Social Media, experience worth sharing.
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________
The material is based upon information which we consider to be reliable but we do not represent that it is accurate or complete and it should not be relied upon as such. We accept no liability for errors, or omissions of opinion or fact. In particular, no reliance should be placed on the comments on trends in financial markets. The receipt of this email should not be construed as the giving of advice relating to finance or investment.

______________________________________________________________________________________________________________
If you do not wish to receive any further Saturday Economist updates, please unsubscribe using the buttons below or drop me an email at jkaonline@me.com. If you enjoy the content, why not forward to a friend, they can sign up here ...
_______________________________________________________________________________________
For details of our Privacy Policy   and our Terms and Conditions check out our main web site. John Ashcroft and Company.com
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Copyright © 2017 The Saturday Economist, All rights reserved. You are receiving this email as a member of the Saturday Economist Mailing List or the Dimensions of Strategy List. You may have joined the list from Linkedin, Facebook Google+ or one of the related web sites. Our mailing address is: The Saturday Economist, Tower 12, Spinningfields, Manchester, M3 3BZ, United Kingdom.

LikeTwitterPinterestGooglePlusLinkedInForward
Tower 12, Bridge Street, M3 3BZ, Manchester, United Kingdom
You may unsubscribe or change your contact details at any time.