UK’s Unexpected Inflation Slowdown Provides Respite for Reeves
UK’s Unexpected Inflation Slowdown Provides Respite for Reeves · Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- UK inflation unexpectedly cooled for the first time in three months in December, prompting traders to increase bets on Bank of England interest-rate cuts this year and soothing market jitters surrounding the British economy.

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Consumer prices rose 2.5% from a year earlier, down from a 2.6% pace in November, the Office for National Statistics said Wednesday. The figure was in line with the BOE’s forecast from November and better than the unchanged reading expected by private-sector economists.

There were signs that underlying pressures are abating as price growth in the services sector eased to 4.4%, the lowest since March 2022, from 5%. However, the fall was largely driven by a plunge in volatile air fares and a sharp easing in hotel price inflation. Economists warned these factors may reverse.

Still, the bigger-than-predicted cooling in price pressures calmed investors after a week of turmoil on financial markets that pushed benchmark government bond yields to a 17-year high and threatened to derail Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves’ entire economic agenda. Higher borrowing costs have put her at risk of breaking her own fiscal rules ahead of a crucial update from the Office for Budget Responsibility on March 26.

The 10-year gilt yield pulled back eight basis points on Wednesday morning to around 4.8%, a larger drop than seen in European bonds and earning Reeves a little more breathing space. The pound slipped as much as 0.4% after the release but then rose to $1.224, up slightly on the day.

Reeves did not mention the recent market selloff in her response to the inflation data but said there was “still work to be done” to contain inflation.

Traders added to rate cut bets following the figures, pricing in an extra 12 basis points of easing by the end of the year. That means they now largely expect two quarter-point cuts in 2025. Governor Andrew Bailey and fellow rate-setters have signaled they back further reductions at a “gradual” pace.

Energy bills

Economists have warned that inflation could climb back this year at above 3%, driven partly by higher energy and fuel costs. That would be higher than the 2.8% peak the BOE had expected back in November. Bloomberg cross-asset strategist Ven Ram had warned that any drop in inflation may only bring short-term relief for gilts. Traders were still “concerned that the worst is yet to come for cost pressures.”