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BOE Set To Deliver Biggest Rate Rise In 33 Years

The Bank of England likely to step up an effort to rein in double-digit inflation.

BOE Set to Deliver Biggest Rate Rise in 33 Years
BOE Set to Deliver Biggest Rate Rise in 33 Years

The Bank of England on Thursday is expected to deliver its biggest interest-rate increase in 33 years, stepping up an effort to rein in double-digit inflation. 

The UK central bank delivers its decision at 12:00 p.m. London time, with Governor Andrew Bailey leading a press conference a half hour later. Officials will publish their outlook for the economy and inflation, likely confirming a long recession is now under way.

BOE Set To Deliver Biggest Rate Rise In 33 Years

Upheaval in the government has clouded the policy-making landscape for Bailey and his colleagues. Liz Truss promised to stimulate the economy during her brief tenure as prime minister. That triggered a market panic and brought Rishi Sunak to power, who is slamming on the brakes with a warning that taxes will have to increase.

“We’re set for a prolonged period of sluggish, even stagnant, growth over the next couple of years,” said Paul Hollingsworth, Chief European Economist, BNP Paribas Markets. “We’ve got headwinds coming both sides with the synchronized monetary and fiscal policy tightening.”

Here’s what to expect from the BOE’s decision:

Interest Rates

A 75-basis point increase in the key rate is almost fully priced in by money markets and expected by economist. That would bring the base rate to 3%, the highest since 2008 and the biggest single increase since 1989. 

A half-point rise would match the moves in August and September, which were the largest since 1995. Either way, the current tightening cycle that started in December is the quickest since the late 1980s, when the benchmark lending rate doubled to 15% in little more than a year. 

Even so, those expectations are relatively mild when compared with the alarm that erupted after Sept. 23, when Truss’s government set out a plan to slash taxes and boost borrowing. Markets responded by anticipating the BOE would have to boost its key rate 2 percentage points by this month to contain the inflationary stimulus. Those bets implied the likelihood of an intra-meeting hike.

BOE Set To Deliver Biggest Rate Rise In 33 Years

Truss’s departure and Sunak’s decision to reverse most of her promises brought expectations back to where they were before she took office on Sept. 6, with investors anticipating further sharp increases in the benchmark lending rate this autumn. Deputy Governor Ben Broadbent tempered some of that view last month, noting that rates may not have to rise as far as investors expect. 

“The more tightening is done via the fiscal channel, the less the BOE has to hike,” said Bruna Skarica, UK Economist, at Morgan Stanley. “That has been visible in the repricing of the BOE hiking expectations following the mini-Budget U-Turns.”

What Bloomberg Economics Says ...

“Expectations for the Bank of England’s meeting have whipsawed over the past month as investors and economists gauged how the central bank would respond to the market meltdown engulfing the UK. With the architects of the chaos no longer in power and the risk premium on UK assets fading, the pressure on the BOE to act aggressively has eased.”

--Dan Hanson, Bloomberg Economics. Click for the INSIGHT.

Of the 45 economists surveyed by Bloomberg, most expect a 75 basis-point hike Thursday. Three expect a full percentage-point increase, and three expect a half point.

Bigger rate rises were announced during a brief and unsuccessful attempt to bolster sterling during the 1992 exchange-rate crisis, an event known as Black Wednesday. However, the increases were unwound within a day.

Vote Split

The nine-member Monetary Policy Committee split three ways at its September meeting, when Bailey and the majority pushed through a half-point rate rise. Jonathan Haskel, Catherine Mann and Dave Ramsden argued for a 75 basis-point increase. Swati Dhingra wanted a smaller, quarter-point move.

This time, the most popular view among economists is for a 7-2 split, with dissenting votes for a smaller move. About a third of those surveyed expect a 6-3 vote.

The arguments about what’s driving rates will help color the discussion on how high borrowing costs will peak. The median forecast of economists is now 4.25% sometime next year. That’s below the 4.75% priced by investors.

Economic Forecasts

Most economists think the BOE will raise its growth forecast and cut the outlook for inflation this year. Beyond that, there’s no consensus.

The situation is more complex than usual, since so much has changed since the BOE’s last forecasts at the start of August. Government support for household energy bills announced in September will restrain inflation  -- currently running at the fastest pace in four decades -- and stimulate growth until April. Beyond then, the government hasn’t yet set out a plan.

Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt plans to set out tax and spending policies on Nov. 17, but hints about what’s in that package won’t color the BOE’s forecasts for Thursday’s decision. Natural gas prices for next year have fallen sharply since August, but this year’s readings are slightly stronger than they were, and whether Europe has enough natural gas to get through the winter after Russia cut off supplies is still an open question.

BOE Set To Deliver Biggest Rate Rise In 33 Years

“Monetary policymakers are flying blind because of the uncertainty, but saying that this is just because of fiscal uncertainty is missing the underlying real problem,” said Torsten Bell, chief executive officer of the Resolution Foundation.

With the cost of living crisis biting hard, the UK is likely now in a recession that will last for four quarters and cost around 1% of GDP, with economists predicting no growth until the end of 2023.  That scenario is only slightly better than the BOE predicted in August. Inflation, which the BOE had expected to peak above 13% in October, may now top out around 12% in April when the energy-price freeze ends. That’s six times the BOE target.

Quantitative Tightening

The central bank’s rate decision is also being taken against a new backdrop of quantitative tightening -- a program under which the BOE will systematically sell many of the bonds it bought during the period following the financial crisis to promote growth.

BOE Set To Deliver Biggest Rate Rise In 33 Years

The BOE was the first major central bank to start a QT program while simultaneously hiking interest rates. Despite speculation that the QT program may be delayed to avoid reigniting the gilt market, the BOE commenced with its first sale of £750 million ($863 million) on Monday. 

The auction met with surprisingly little drama and a huge £2.44 billion of bids, partly due to the bank’s decision to hold-off selling long-dated assets, where the turmoil was concentrated.

“We expect limited new information on active sales this week, given smooth initial auctions,” added Skarica. “The fact that active sales are now concentrated in the front end of the curve, makes them marginally more impactful, as the UK’s financial conditions are front-end linked. However, the bank rate remains the dominant policy tool, and we don’t see any major tensions here.”

Read more:

  • BOE Sells £750 Million Bonds in Move to Pull Back Stimulus
  • UK Short-End Bonds Extend Gains Before Fed, BOE Decisions
  • UK’s Sliding Repo Rate Is Watering Down the Impact of BOE Hikes
  • UK Starts to Feel the Pinch From Biggest Rate Rises in 33 Years
  • Sunak, Hunt Say ‘Inevitable’ All Britons Will Pay More Tax 
  • UK’s Growth Plan Is Dead as Sunak Pivots Toward Spending Cuts
  • BOE Joining 75-Bp Club With Message It Will Be a One-Off

--With assistance from .

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