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The
start of the Iran war on Feb. 28 set in train a chain of events
that has done much to upend global economic forecasts, not least
in how it will affect prices. The longer the Iran war and the
associated closure of the Strait of Hormuz go on, the greater
the economic pain will be. A fifth of the world’s crude oil goes
through the strait.
The most tangible impact has been in oil and gas markets, with
prices rising sharply higher since the start of the war. That
has already had an impact on prices at the pump and will, if
sustained, lead to higher domestic energy bills.
With these new inflationary pressures stalking the global
economy, central bankers are having to reassess their
projections in 2026, both for inflation and growth. On Wednesday
evening, the U.S. Federal Reserve held its key interest rate
unchanged, as expected.
For the Bank of England, it's likely to mean that inflation will
not fall to its target rate of 2% as soon as expected and will
lead to a higher price profile for the rest of the year — hardly
the backdrop for further interest rate reductions anytime soon.
“The bank would be wise to wait and see whether a rise in energy
prices triggers a reacceleration of underlying price pressures
before acting,” said Andrew Wishart, U.K. economist at Berenberg
Bank.
Wishart said the bank's nine-member Monetary Policy Committee
could cut its main interest rates from the current 3.75% as soon
as June — provided the closure of the Strait of Hormuz is
short-lived.
“If energy prices stay high for six months, the bank would
probably delay the reduction until 2027,” he added.
After last month's rate-setting meeting, financial markets were
predicting at least two to three quarter-point reductions in the
base rate this year. Economic projections accompanying the
decision to keep rates unchanged then showed inflation hitting
the target in the spring. But the bank's governor, Andrew
Bailey, said “all going well," there should be scope for some
further cuts this year.
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