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UK inflation unchanged at 4% in January

UK consumer price inflation stood at an annual rate of 4% in January, new figures show today
UK consumer price inflation stood at an annual rate of 4% in January, new figures show today

British inflation unexpectedly held steady at 4% in January, defying forecasts of a rise, official data showed, offering relief for the Bank of England and Prime Minister Rishi Sunak too ahead of a national election expected this year.

Economists polled by Reuters had expected an increase in the annual rate to 4.2%.

UK consumer price inflation - which surged as high as a 11.1% in October 2022 - is expected to fall further in the coming months, paving the way for the Bank of England to start cutting borrowing costs from their 16-year high.

Sterling weakened against the dollar and the euro after the inflation data was published.

Investors added to their bets on the Bank of England cutting interest rates this year, putting a roughly 72% chance of a first reduction coming in June, compared with only a 40% chance yesterday after a surprise jump in US inflation.

"Overall, the latest inflation data should reassure the Monetary Policy Committee that the time to start cutting interest rates is approaching," Martin Beck, chief economic advisor to the EY ITEM Club, said.

Britain's core inflation, which excludes volatile food, energy, alcohol and tobacco prices, was also unchanged at 5.1%, the Office for National Statistics said.

Services inflation - an indicator of domestic price pressures - rose to 6.5% from 6.4% in December but was not as strong as the Bank of England had expected.

The British central bank fears rapid wage growth - which makes up much of the inflation rate in the services sector - could add more inflationary pressure across the economy.

Data published earlier this week showed regular wages rose by an annual 6.2% in the last three months of 2023, the slowest increase in more than a year but about double the pace the Bank of England views as consistent with getting inflation back sustainably to 2%.

"Inflation never falls in a perfect straight line, but the plan is working," finance minister Jeremy Hunt said. "We have made huge progress in bringing inflation down from 11% and the Bank of England forecast that it will fall to around 2% in a matter of months."

MPC member Jonathan Haskel, one of two policymakers who voted to raise interest rates at the Bank of England's most recent meeting, last week told Reuters he would need to see more evidence of inflation pressures weakening before changing his stance.

The Bank of England

Samuel Tombs, an economist with Pantheon Macroeconomics, estimated today that a gauge of core services prices that the Bank of England is watching closely rose by a modest 1.2% month-on-month.

Tombs had initially said the measure fell, which could have been evidence of inflation pressures weakening, but corrected his estimate.

In further welcome news for consumers, food inflation fell for the first time in monthly terms since September 2021, dropping by 0.4% from December.

High inflation has impacted British households' living standards over the last couple of years, contributing to the electoral challenge facing Sunak whose Conservative Party is lagging far behind the opposition Labour Party in opinion polls.

Separate ONS data added to signs of weaker inflation pressures ahead as prices paid by manufacturers fell by an annual 3.3%, the biggest fall since May 2020. The prices they charged also dropped, down by 0.6%, the biggest fall since November 2020.

The weakening inflation outlook is likely to help Britain's economy grow moderately in 2024, although official data tomorrow is likely to show that it slipped into a shallow recession in the second half of 2023, according to the analysts polled by Reuters.