UK’s inflation higher than expected after oil price hikes

    • Higher prices at the pump for motorists were the biggest driver keeping inflation steady, while prices of food and non-alcoholic drinks and furniture and household goods pulled the other way.
    • Higher prices at the pump for motorists were the biggest driver keeping inflation steady, while prices of food and non-alcoholic drinks and furniture and household goods pulled the other way. PHOTO: AFP
    Published Wed, Oct 18, 2023 · 04:10 PM

    UK INFLATION failed to slow as forecast in September as rising oil prices offset downward pressures from food costs.

    The Consumer Prices Index rose 6.7 per cent from a year earlier, the same pace as the previous month, the Office for National Statistics said on Wednesday (Oct 18). Economists had been expecting inflation to fall back to 6.6 per cent.

    The miss wasn’t big enough to change the outlook for interest rates after a string of 14 consecutive increases from the Bank of England started to weigh on the economy. Officials at the central bank are weighing whether they have to do more to return inflation to their 2 per cent goal and meet next on Nov 2. 

    At the Monetary Policy Committee’s last meeting in September, officials voted against a rate hike for the first time since November 2021, with the majority of members preferring to wait and see how the economy evolved. 

    “This morning’s data has delivered a nasty shock,” says Chieu Cao, chief executive officer of Mintago, a financial wellbeing adviser. “While the overall rate of price increases may not have technically risen, certain essential expenses continue to soar.”

    Money-market wagers on further rate hikes held broadly steady, placing a 30 per cent chance on a quarter-point increase next month and more than a 60 per cent probability of such a move by early next year. Markets price 40 basis points of policy easing next year, with the first cut by November.

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    Paul Dales, chief UK economist at Capital Economics, said it was “disappointing” that CPI failed to fall in September. “But as it is still below the 6.9 per cent rate the Bank of England projected back in August we still think that the Bank won’t raise interest rates again,” he said.

    The surprise reading on inflation comes just a day after jobs data from the ONS indicated a slight cooling in the labour market. Average earnings growth slowed from a month earlier, though remained near historic highs, while the number of workers on company payrolls dropped. 

    “Inflationary momentum is set to weaken in the coming months,” said Yael Selfin, chief economist at KPMG UK. “Together with the ongoing loosening of the labour market, this should be sufficient for the Bank of England to keep interest rates on hold.”

    Core inflation – which excludes volatile food and energy prices – fell less than expected to 6.1 per cent from 6.2 per cent. Services inflation, which is closely watched by the BOE, unexpectedly accelerated to 6.9 per cent from 6.8 per cent.

    Higher prices at the pump for motorists were the biggest driver keeping inflation steady, while prices of food and non-alcoholic drinks and furniture and household goods pulled the other way. The price of motor fuel rose 3.6 per cent between August and September, compared with a drop of 4 per cent a year earlier.

    The annual inflation rate for restaurants and hotels also crept up from 8.3 per cent to 8.6 per cent. This sign of domestically driven inflation will be a worry for the BOE, as some policymakers fear workers are still bidding up wages to an extent that is inconsistent with getting inflation down.

    “Food and non-alcoholic drinks prices eased again across a range of items with the cost of household appliances and airfares also falling this month,” said ONS chief economist Grant Fitzner. “These were offset by rising prices for motor fuels and the cost of hotel stays.”

    Economists expect another step downwards in the inflation rate in October due to a fall in household energy bills under the price cap, which may help keep in reach Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s goal of halving inflation this year.

    “As we have seen across other G-7 countries, inflation rarely falls in a straight line, but if we stick to our plan then we still expect it to keep falling this year,” Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt said. “Today’s news just shows this is even more important so we can ease the pressure on families and businesses.”

    The figures also mean welfare recipients are in line for a generous increase in the payments next April, as the annual uprating is based on CPI inflation in the previous September.

    At one end of the nine-member MPC, Catherine Mann is adamant that monetary policy should remain “aggressive” to avoid the risk that domestic inflationary pressures become embedded. At the other, Swati Dhingra is more concerned that “overtightening” will damage the UK’s supply potential.

    The BOE’s chief economist Huw Pill is between the two – while he warned against “complacence” in getting inflation down, he said official wage data which have consistently “surprised to the upside” were increasingly looking like an “outlier” when compared with other economic data.

    All eyes will now be on the second batch of labour market data from the ONS due next Tuesday, covering the UK’s employment, unemployment and inactivity rate. 

    Producer input and output prices both rose 0.4 per cent on the month reflecting the rising cost of crude oil. They are both lower than a year earlier, however, suggesting pipeline pressures are easing.

    “With the all-important Christmas period fast approaching, retailers hope that cost pressures continue to ease in the coming months,” said Helen Dickinson, CEO of the British Retail Consortium. “Unfortunately, the September CPI figures – which will determine how much business rates will increase in April 2024 – mean that retailers face a £470m (S$784 million)-a-year increase from next year. This will inevitably put renewed pressure on consumer prices.” BLOOMBERG

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