Bangkok Post

BoE raises rates as expected

Central bank signals no rush for next hike

- WILLIAM SCHOMBERG DAVID MILLIKEN

LONDON: The Bank of England pushed interest rates above their financial crisis lows yesterday, but signalled it was in no hurry to raise them further as Brexit approaches with no clear outline of Britain’s future relationsh­ip with the European Union.

The BoE’s nine rate-setters were unexpected­ly unanimous in their vote to raise base rate to 0.75% from 0.50%, the level at which it has spent most of the past decade apart from 15 months after the 2016 Brexit vote when it was cut even lower.

Economists polled by Reuters had mostly expected a 7-2 vote in favour of a hike.

The BoE said that while growth had slowed ahead of Britain’s departure from the EU in March 2019, the country’s economy was operating at almost its “speed limit,” or full capacity, raising the prospect of more home-grown inflation pressure ahead.

But the message for borrowing costs remained one of gradual and limited increases as the central bank saw inflation only a fraction above its 2% target over the next few years.

BoE governor Mark Carney, explaining a new estimate by the central bank of neutral interest rates for Britain’s economy, stressed the gradual path for rising rates ahead. “Policy needs to walk — not run — to stand still.”

Sterling rose modestly against the dollar immediatel­y after the BoE’s announceme­nt of a 9-0 vote to raise rates but turned around and hit its lowest levels of the day after Carney’s comment.

The BoE said its forecasts were based on bets by investors who expect another rate hike only in late 2019 or early 2020, with Bank Rate creeping up to 1.1% in late 2020. That was a fraction lower than a projection of rates of 1.2% the last time the BoE published forecasts for the economy in May.

“The economy has done just about enough for the Bank of England to justify a hike today. But no one should get too excited about this being a sign of things to come,” said Luke Bartholome­w, an investment strategist at Aberdeen Standard Investment­s.

“It is almost unthinkabl­e that the Bank of England will follow up with further rate rises in the next few months given the risks on the horizon.”

The world’s fifth-biggest economy has slowed since the referendum decision to leave the EU.

With less than eight months until Brexit, London and Brussels — as well as key members of Prime Minister Theresa May’s Conservati­ve Party — remain far apart on what their future trading relationsh­ip should look like.

The BoE said the economy “could be influenced significan­tly by the response of households, businesses and financial markets” to news on Brexit.

But the central bank continued to stress that Britain’s economy was at risk of too much inflation even with slow growth.

The bank said inflation in two years’ time was likely to be 2.09%, above the 2% target.

It expected Britain’s economy would grow by 1.4% this year, unchanged from its forecast in May, but it nudged up its 2019 forecast to 1.8% from 1.7%.

Several private-sector economists have challenged the BoE’s view that inflation pressures are building and say raising ratesnow only risks a U-turn by the central bank if Britain fails to get a Brexit deal.

Carney has said that, in that event, all bets on future BoE rate hikes will be off.

Some investors think the risk of a global trade war is another reason for caution.

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