Philippine Daily Inquirer

All eyes on Brexit talks

- —REUTERS

DUBLIN— The nine-month Brexit “phoney war” is set to come to an end this week when British Prime Minister Theresa May notifies the European Union of Britain’s intention to leave, starting two years of unpreceden­ted negotiatio­ns.

May will send a letter to European Council President Donald Tusk on Wednesday to trigger Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty.

Tusk will then send draft negotiatin­g guidelines to the 27 other member states within 48 hours.

That means it will finally be down to business after an at times painstakin­gly slow drawing of battle lines.

Britain appears to have set its course for a “hard Brexit,” where a clean break is favored to regain control over immigratio­n, while the EU’s chief negotiator last week spelled out its need for early agreements on citizens’ rights, money and borders.

But May has revealed little of her strategy to secure what she calls “the best possible deal” for the world’s fifth-largest economy. Her letter this week and Tusk’s reply may offer markets keen for details some hints at how rocky the path ahead may be.

“The tone of this process might have implicatio­ns for sterling markets,” said Investec economist Chris Hare.

May has other domestic political issues to tackle as well, including today’s deadline to form a new regional government in Northern Ireland or risk having its decision-making moved back to London, and a Scottish Parliament vote on Tuesday on whether to second a second independen­ce referendum. Last Friday, revised fourth-quarter GDP data will outline how Britain will come to the Brexit negotiatin­g table with a far healthier econo- my than most predicted last June.

After retail sales suffered their biggest squeeze in nearly 7 years on Thursday as higher inflation begins to bite, timelier indicators this week including mortgage approvals, house prices and consumer confidence may be worth watching more closely.

Trump’s test

The potential economic implicatio­ns of 2016’s other major earthquake at the ballot box—the election of US President Donald Trump—could play out at a much faster pace with last week’s do-or-die reschedule­d vote on a new healthcare bill.

The vote had been billed by financial markets as a crucial test of Trump’s ability to work with Congress to deliver on progrowth policies like tax cuts and infrastruc­ture spending.

Leaders from Trump’s Republican party postponed what was supposed to have been his first legislativ­e victory because of opposition from two flanks in the party on Thursday. Even if it gets approval from the House, the legislatio­n could face an even

tougher fight in the Senate, the other chamber of Congress.

A raft of speeches from top Federal Reserve officials —10 days after the bank raised interest rates for the second time in three months —may pale in comparison to the political drama, as could GDP revisions and key manufactur­ing surveys.

In a date-heavy week around the world, euro zone flash inflation readings for March stand out after annual price rises surged to a four-year high of 2.0 percent in February, zooming up to the European Central Bank’s target of “below but close to 2 percent.”

Rising inflation across the 19country bloc has put pressure on rate setters to say when and how extraordin­ary stimulus measures could be scaled back, although still weak underlying figures have limited discussion­s so far.

“We expect that run to have come to an end this month,” wrote economists at RBC Capital Markets, referring to the six consecutiv­e months of year-on-year headline inflation rate rises.

“With the oil price effect abating and underlying inflation still weak, we see headline inflation continuing to moderate from here and falling to 1.5 percent year-on-year by year-end.”

This week also brings a string of emerging central bank policy meetings with Czech rate setters set to hold their last meeting before the bank’s self-imposed deadline for lifting a 3-1/2-year old currency cap.

Mexico’s central bank meets on Thursday after a spike in inflation to an eight-year high prompted its chief to hint at more interest rate hikes following one just last month. Mexican rates are now at their highest in almost eight years.

 ?? —REUTERS ?? A journalist poses with a copy of the Brexit Article 50 bill, introduced by the government to seek parliament­ary approval to start the process of leaving the European Union.
—REUTERS A journalist poses with a copy of the Brexit Article 50 bill, introduced by the government to seek parliament­ary approval to start the process of leaving the European Union.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines