Economists Predict UK Interest Rates to Reach 5.5% Peak in September

Economists Predict UK Interest Rates to Reach 5.5% Peak in September

UK interest rates will peak at⁢ 5.5% next month as Bank of England⁢ policymakers try to ⁣minimise the impact of higher borrowing costs on the UK economy and ​avoid a prolonged recession, economists predict.

A fresh poll of economists by Reuters‌ suggests the⁣ Bank will approve a 15th consecutive increase in interest rates at its next meeting‍ on 21 September ‌as part of efforts to combat price inflation, which is still more than ⁢three times higher than its 2% target.

All but one of‍ the 62‍ economists surveyed said they⁣ expected⁤ the ⁤Bank’s base rate ⁣to rise by a quarter of a percentage point next month, taking rates⁤ from 5.25% to 5.5%. The only outlier expected a half-point⁣ hike, ⁢which‍ would take rates to 6%.

The Bank has ⁤been raising rates at a clip in an effort to lower surging inflation, ⁤which peaked at 11.1% last October and has since eased⁣ to 6.8% in July.

The Reuters poll shows that ‍economists expect inflation⁤ to average ⁤at 6.8% this quarter, before falling⁢ to 4.7%‌ in the fourth quarter.⁢ It is ​not forecast to drop below the 2% target until at least 2025.

However, policymakers must weigh the consequences of further rate hikes. Higher borrowing costs have⁢ weighed on the⁢ housing market – ⁣as consumers avoid costlier⁢ mortgages​ – and private sector ⁢activity across the UK.

The ‌latest monthly⁣ business ​health‍ checks, known as ‌the‍ purchasing managers’ ⁢index (PMI), showed weakness in the UK services and manufacturing sectors and⁣ the poorest performance for ​both industries since the Covid lockdown in early⁤ 2021.⁤ Companies said they⁤ had struggled amid Britain’s cost of living crisis, lower export demand, fears over the economic outlook, ⁢and higher interest rates.⁤ It has led some experts to predict that the UK will slip ‍into a recession in the third quarter.

“The August [Bank] meeting began⁣ to lay the ground for a⁣ pause,” said James Smith, a developed markets economist at ING. “I think ‍the fact ​ [that] the Bank is now finally‌ admitting​ [its] policy is restrictive⁣ […] it is now​ a turning process to convince markets‍ [that] ⁣rates are ⁢going to stay ⁣high ​for quite some time.

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“It comes down to the data,” he added. “Ideally they would like‍ to stop hiking, given rates are restrictive … By November, the Federal Reserve will​ be done‍ hiking and potentially also the European Central Bank, so it is a⁣ risk‍ being⁤ seen ‍as​ the last hawk standing somewhat​ unnecessarily.”

2023-08-24 04:29:21
Article from ⁣ www.theguardian.com
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