UK inflation picks up less than expected, boosting rate cut bets
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[August 14, 2024] By
David Milliken
LONDON (Reuters) -British consumer price inflation increased for the
first time this year in July, official figures showed on Wednesday, but
the rise was smaller than expected as services prices - closely watched
by the Bank of England - rose less rapidly.
The annual rate of consumer price inflation increased to 2.2% after two
months at the Bank of England's 2% target, the Office for National
Statistics said, coming in slightly below the median 2.3% forecast in a
Reuters poll of economists.
Sterling fell sharply against the U.S. dollar after the data was
published and financial markets priced in a 44% chance of a
quarter-point BoE rate cut in September, up from 36% before the data was
released.
When the BoE cut interest rates from a 16-year high of 5.25% at the
start of this month, it said May and June's 2% inflation readings
probably marked a low point for inflation.
The central bank expected CPI to rise to 2.4% in July and reach around
2.75% by the end of the year as the effect of sharp falls in energy
prices in 2023 faded, before returning to 2% in the first half of 2026.
"Today's data will give the Bank's Monetary Policy Committee some
measure of confidence that domestic price pressures are less likely to
derail a sustainable return to the 2% target," Martin Sartorius,
principal economist at the Confederation of British Industry, said.
British inflation peaked at a 41-year high of 11.1% in October 2022
driven by a surge in energy and food prices after Russia's full-scale
invasion of Ukraine as well as COVID-19 labor shortages and supply chain
disruption.
Consumer price inflation is still lower than in the euro zone, where the
European Central Bank cut interest rates in June, and in the United
States, where the Federal Reserve is widely expected to begin cutting
rates next month.
Nonetheless, many households are still feeling squeezed by the sharp
rise in prices over the past two years.
Deputy finance minister Darren Jones, responding to the data, stuck to
the newly elected Labor government's theme that the figures showed it
had inherited a difficult economic legacy and would need to take tough
decisions to improve things.
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A person pushes a shopping cart next to the clubcard price branding
inside a branch of a Tesco Extra Supermarket in London, Britain,
February 10, 2022. REUTERS/Paul Childs/File Photo
HOTEL COSTS FALL
The BoE remains relatively focused on longer-term inflation
pressures, including services prices and wages as well as general
labor market slack.
Wednesday's data showed that annual services price inflation fell to
5.2% in July from June's 5.7%, below all forecasts in a Reuters poll
and the lowest since June 2022. BoE staff had predicted a drop to
5.6%.
The fall in services price inflation reflected a reversal in June's
sharp increase in the cost of hotels, as well as downward pressure
from air fares, roadside recovery services, package holidays and
cultural services including live music.
Many economists attributed some of June's price increases to concert
tours in Britain, including by U.S. singer Taylor Swift, although
the ONS said it was not possible to draw a clear link.
Official data on Tuesday showed that annual wage growth excluding
bonuses slowed to its lowest in nearly two years at 5.4%, in line
with economists' forecasts but still nearly double the rate the BoE
sees as consistent with CPI staying at 2%.
However, those figures also showed a surprise drop in unemployment -
albeit based on a survey that is being overhauled - and economists
said the BoE was likely to remain cautious about cutting rates, even
after today's inflation data.
"Absent any material shock to growth, this cutting cycle is likely
to be gradual with a quarterly cadence most likely. Investors
banking on imminent rate cuts will therefore be disappointed," said
Aaron Hussein, global market strategist at J.P. Morgan Asset
Management.
Financial markets priced in a further 0.49 percentage points of cuts
by the BoE over the remainder of this year, up from 0.46 percentage
points before the data.
(Reporting by David Milliken; editing by William Schomberg, Andrew
Heavens and Toby Chopra)
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