UK inflation unexpectedly leaps to 6-month high in
August
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[September 19, 2018]
By Andy Bruce and William Schomberg
LONDON (Reuters) - British inflation jumped
unexpectedly to a six-month high in August, pushed up by
bigger-than-usual seasonal increases in sea and air fares and briefly
sending sterling above $1.32 for the first time since July.
Consumer price inflation rose to an annual rate of 2.7 percent in August
from 2.5 percent in July, the Office for National Statistics said -
above all forecasts in a Reuters poll of economists that had pointed to
a fall to 2.4 percent.
The ONS also said British house prices rose at the weakest annual rate
in nearly five years, dragged down by the biggest drop in London house
prices since 2009 - the latest sign of a slack housing market since the
2016 Brexit vote.
Wednesday's data jolted investors. British government bond prices fell
and sterling rose sharply, but it dropped later on a report Prime
Minister Theresa May will reject a new European Union plan to solve the
Irish border problem around Brexit.
The inflation figures are also likely to surprise Bank of England
officials who had expected inflation to cool to 2.4 percent in August.
The BoE last month raised interest rates for the second time since the
financial crisis but pointed to only gradual future increases as it
expects inflation to drift down to near its 2 percent target in three
years' time.
Most analysts doubted the latest jump in inflation reflected a rise in
underlying price pressures and was driven mostly by factors like theater
ticket prices that were probably one-offs.
"Despite the overshoot, we are doubtful that we are likely to see any
resulting shift in the mood music from those on the UK's Monetary Policy
Committee," Investec economist Victoria Clarke said.
Still, the rise in inflation in August represents a setback to the
modest recovery in real-terms wage growth that has helped to support
economic growth this year.
The fall in the value of the pound in August on renewed concerns about
Brexit deprived consumers of the benefit of a fall in oil prices in
annual terms, the ONS figures showed.
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Prices are displayed on a store window in London, Britain May 16,
2017. REUTERS/Neil Hall
Consumer price inflation hit a five-year high of 3.1 percent last November, when
the inflationary effect of the pound's tumble after Britain's June 2016
referendum vote to exit the EU reached its peak.
GRAPHIC - UK economy interactive: http://tmsnrt.rs/2byBv8u
LONDON FALLING
The ONS said house prices in July rose by an annual 3.1 percent across the
United Kingdom as a whole compared with 3.2 percent in June - the smallest
increase since August 2013.
House prices in London alone fell 0.7 percent year-on-year in July, the biggest
drop since September 2009.
"Slowing growth in house prices will encourage households to save a larger share
of their incomes and will strengthen the case for the MPC to hold back from
raising Bank Rate again within the next six months," economist Samuel Tombs from
Pantehon Macroeconomics said.
Despite August's rise in the headline rate of inflation, the ONS data suggested
there could be some relief for consumers in the months ahead.
Prices at British factory gates rose 2.9 percent year-on-year in August, the
weakest increase in four months. Manufacturers' costs for materials and energy
also rose at the slowest pace in four months.
(Reporting by Andy Bruce and William Schomberg; Editing by Mark Heinrich and
Hugh Lawson)
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