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BOE Shocks With First Rate Hike Since Crisis to Combat Inflation

Published 12/16/2021, 07:07 AM
Updated 12/16/2021, 07:09 AM
© Reuters.  BOE Shocks With First Rate Hike Since Crisis to Combat Inflation

(Bloomberg) -- The Bank of England raised interest rates for the first time since the pandemic struck, setting aside the threat to the U.K. economy posed by record coronavirus cases to lead the global fight against surging inflation.

Officials led by Governor Andrew Bailey voted 8-1 to lift borrowing costs by 15 basis points to 0.25%, delivering an increase that no other Group of Seven central bank has made since the start of the crisis. Silvana Tenreyro was the sole dissenter. Policy makers said more “modest” tightening is likely to be needed as inflation heads toward a peak likely to be around 6% in April.

The BOE’s precipitous shift into tightening mode will surprise the large majority of economists who anticipated no change, and investors who were pricing in around a 40% chance of a move. The outcome was the second in a row featuring a surprise after November’s decision to stay on hold wrong-footed financial markets. 

The U.S. Federal Reserve already set a hawkish tone on the eve of the BOE announcement by signaling three rate hikes next year and accelerating the wind down of its stimulus program, while Norway kept up its own tightening effort on Thursday with its second increase this year.  

The BOE hike is a response to the danger posed by surging prices gains, with a report this week showing inflation jumped to 5.1% in November -- more than double the central bank’s target -- and a separate report Tuesday showing U.K. companies added to payrolls at a record pace.

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Considering that backdrop, Goldman Sachs Group Inc Chief European Economist Jari Stehn told Bloomberg Television just hours earlier that an outcome of no change was “not a done deal,” even though it was his main expectation.

The decision to move now is all the more remarkable since the country is in the grips of a new coronavirus wave driven by the more infectious omicron variant, which has pushed daily case loads in the U.K. to the highest recorded total since the pandemic began. 

The danger that poses in potentially overwhelming the country’s health services is such that Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government has reintroduced some curbs on activity, with more possible in coming days and weeks if the outbreak can’t be quelled.  

By moving now, the BOE heeded a warning this week from the International Monetary Fund, which cautioned against policy inaction on inflation.  

The Fed’s shift on Wednesday underscores the level of alarm felt by some global central bankers. It laid out a road map for a series of rate increases over coming years as Chair Jerome Powell signaled that inflation is now enemy No. 1 to keeping the U.S. economic expansion on track. 

Later on Thursday, the European Central Bank is due to explain its own plan for moving on from emergency stimulus. President Christine Lagarde has been at pains however to persuade investors that a rate increase in the euro zone isn’t going to happen any time soon. 

 

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

 

Latest comments

Shocks? Was more than expected. Who owns Bloomberg and Reuters man? What’s up with this fear and emotion campaign? These guys must be shorting the market.
they pretend to actually care so let's move it 15 or let's taper and buy less, no let's say we will lower our minimums wft
in the UK stonks only go...down???
Shocks? No it didn't shock anyone. Maybe it shocks you, but that'd make sense
Inflation at 9%…. Moving rates to 0.25% will not combat inflation what a joke
No, it won't. At least they realised there's an issue, and I expect another rise in February if not next month
the increased cost of credit will be reflected on goods services sending inflation higher. game over for all the feds.
exactly why central bankers think raising rates is cure to reduce inflation? Shouldn't central bankers ease production costs to increase productivity instead of adding more costs to produce?
Lesser money in the system helps change priorities of Corporates and other borrowers and make them more disciplined. They demand lesser prices from commodity producers. However, with Central Bank of China having reduced its Repo Rate, the demand will come from China, which will make it difficult for UK to reduce inflation.
BOE trying to deceive the public that inflation is caused by oversupply of money, instead of the short energy supply that is constraining businesses indirectly to put up their prices. Putting pressure on businesses with the high fuel input costs is disastrous...
Next economy collapse as too late to stop super high inflation.
Next will be stagflation..
it's already here
At least one central banker has a backbone, though many more rate increases will have to follow to be effective. For the EU and US: we will keep printing no matter what!
easy big short is comming
shows how weak and market focused the fed really is need to get back to keeping to their mandates
They care far more about the market than inflation obviously
that seems to be case but the market isn't their job whilst they seem to be behind the curve on inflation and that's only going come back round later next year possible forcing them to rise rates quicker and more than they want l.
I fail to see how interest rate hike will prevent inflation. The inflation is energy cost driven. Its not like the demand for energy that is already in short supply will diminish.... Just political maneuvering. ...
 one step ahead of you, you are repeating fundamentals.
I guarantee the energy prices will stay high and go up even higher...
I don’t disagree with you there. I think energy, particularly oil, is influenced by external factors - chiefly OPEC+. Of course if the U.S. goes into a recession then demand for oil and its derivatives should decrease.
.15%?  Really?  You call that a rate hike?  Really?
With all the gearing and margin in the markets, this will cause public debt default. Don't underestimate severity.... Housing prices will fall, unemployment will rise...
I totally agree with you on that point. Any incremental rise in rates will have a magnified effect on the ability to service our debt.
It's the housing bubble, just in a much larger scale. Rates were low and people got stupid.
Brits are actually thinking of their currency.
good
$
The fraud continues.
Dont get it all year rate hikes will hurt markrts now we get on the way to ath
Wow GBP finally got its bulls back … this is a bullish christmas run!!… weldone
I've got $100 they won't raise
Haha u got $100 hajha why dont u buy Tesla shares today??..
Pay up mate!
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