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Bank of England hikes interest rate to 5%, 13th rise in a row

Published 22/06/2023, 12:13
© Reuters Bank of England hikes interest rate to 5%, 13th rise in a row

Proactive Investors - The Bank of England's monetary policy committee (MPC) hiked interest rates half a point to 5.0%.

It was the 13th rate rise in a row as policymakers look to get a grip on inflation that has remained stubbornly high.

The MPC voted by a majority of 7–2 to increase rate to 5%, with two members preferred to maintain bank rate at 4.5%, as in the previous meeting.

It followed yesterday's inflation figures delivered unwanted surprises, with the consumer price index remaining at 8.7% and core CPI rising to a 31-year high of 7.1%.

The UK base rate is currently 4.5% after the MPC hiked by a quarter of a percentage point at the meeting in May.

A rise to 4.75% had been widely expected before the CPI release, but some economists are now predicting a move to 5.0% today, with odds on further hikes also moving as a result of the stubborn inflation figures.

"It's difficult to stress just how bad that UK release was yesterday," said economist Jim Reid at Deutsche Bank (ETR:DBKGn), noting that both headline and core CPI surprised on the upside for a four consecutive month, leaving the UK an outlier with the highest inflation in the G7 by some margin.

In recent weeks, markets started to fully price in a move to 6% bank rate over the coming months from BoE boss Andrew Bailey and his colleagues, returning to the levels seen after the 'mini budget' turmoil last September.

On Thursday morning markets were pricing a 37% chance of a hike to 5.0% later in the day.

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"But looking over the June and August meetings together, we’ve got 76bps of rate hikes priced, so that implies markets are fully pricing in a larger move for one of the next two decisions," said Reid,

Read more on Proactive Investors UK

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Latest comments

when you took a morgade loan you knew what you were doing and you knew the risks. you can't afford it, sell the house and stop f..
sack Bailey .. asleep at the wheel.
Good news for savers who have lived with zero rates for too long.
what Muppets use savings accounts
can someone explain to me how raising interest rates can reduce the price of foreign food prices already set by the country of scource.
Higher interest rates gives more value to the £, the higher the value of the £ the cheaper things are to buy for holders of the £. The uk import more now then ever before… You can thank the Labour Party for that “we are now a financial hub not a manufacturing county” -Gorden Brown-
By restricting demand, higher interest rate means more money into savings/gilts. Less money into companhies/equity. Debt becomes more expensive. People lose their jobs, colling demand. People buy less food and as a consequence food prices stabilize. Inflation almos never goes down. It just stabilize.
 Inflation leads to even higher inflation, recession, and unemployment. Raising interest rates leads to recession and unemployment, but it stops inflation.
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