Thursday, January 10, 2008

Zapatero seeks to dispel fears over economy

(FT)  - Spain's Socialist prime minister on Wednesday accused his conservative opponents of "unpatriotically" sowing alarm about the economy as he sought to dispel fears that the country was succumbing to the international credit squeeze ahead of a general election in early March.

José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero said he was confident Spain would grow by "at least" 3 per cent in 2008, compared with 3.7 per cent in 2007 and that, with the end of the construction boom, growth would be "more balanced, more productive and more sustainable".
 
 
 

Bank of England holds rates, cut seen in Feb

(Reuters) - The Bank of England left interest rates unchanged on Thursday, following a week of intense speculation over whether it would cut them for a second month running to shore up economic growth.

The Bank held the main rate at 5.5 percent, having lowered it a quarter percentage point in December.

Still, the pause is likely to be short-lived and the Bank is widely tipped to cut rates again in February, when it publishes new growth and inflation forecasts.

The pound rose after the decision while Britain's index of leading shares .FTSE turned negative with retail stocks taking a sharp knock.

Most economists had predicted a no-change verdict but money markets, spooked by signs of a consumer retrenchment, were pricing in a 60 percent chance of a cut.

"We suspect that the deteriorating growth outlook, particularly for the household sector, was balanced by worries on inflation," said James Knightley at ING Bank.