Daily Mail

Markets in meltdown as recession fears mount

Interest rates rise in UK and US Shares plunge on Wall Street Pound hits 22-month low

- By Lucy White

GLOBAL markets were plunged into chaos last night after central banks ramped up their fight against inflation.

On a bleak day for the economy, the Bank of England raised interest rates to a 13-year high while warning inflation will top 10pc, plunging Britain into recession.

The grim analysis came just a day after the Federal Reserve raised rates in the US by the most in 22 years in an attempt to get a grip on rising prices.

The pound plunged more than 2pc to a low of $1.2326 – a level not seen for nearly two years – as officials on Threadneed­le Street sketched out a gloomy forecast of soaring inflation and stalling growth. And in New York, stock markets tumbled, with more than 1,000 points was wiped off the Dow Jones Industrial Average as it fell 3.1pc.

The tech-heavy Nasdaq index sank by 5pc, while the S&P 500 index of America’s top companies slid by 3.6pc.

It was one of the worst days for US stocks since the Covid crash of 2020. Investors feared a string of rate hikes were on the way, despite attempts by the Fed on Wednesday to downplay its aggressive­ness.

Central banks around the world are attempting to push inflation down by raising rates, encouragin­g saving rather than spending.

But if they hike rates too fast, they risk depressing the Covid recovery and even tipping economies back into recession.

This is a worry for high-growth companies such as Amazon, Facebook-owner Meta and Netflix, as much of their valuation is based on the belief that they will rake in money over the future.

This could be under threat if the economy slumps and spending falls – or if interest rates are higher, making borrowing more expensive. David Madden, an analyst at Equiti Capital, said investors were in for a ‘choppy’ period.

He added: ‘It seems that fears about lower growth in the US are still in circulatio­n despite the Fed not acting excessivel­y hawkish.’

Investors were relatively sanguine about the Fed’s 0.5 percentage point rate hike on Wednesday evening – but this was flipped yesterday as traders digested the dreary economic outlook. Randy Frederick, of the Schwab Center for Financial Research in the US, said the extreme reversal in sentiment was ‘truly extraordin­ary’.

Meta dropped by 7pc, Amazon by 7.6pc, Microsoft by 4.4pc and Google parent Alphabet by 4.7pc.

In the UK, sterling tanked as investors sold the currency, worried that its value would be eroded by rising inflation and an economic slump.

Gloomy forecasts from the Bank of England predicted inflation would soar to 10.25pc in the fourth quarter – its highest level since 1982. In response, officials at the central bank hiked interest rates from 0.75pc to 1pc, a level not seen since 2009.

Bond yields, or how much investors expect to be paid to lend, rallied in response. The yield on 10year gilts, issued by the Government, was close to 2pc, a near six-year high.

The yield on the equivalent US Treasury stayed firmly above 3pc, a level not seen since 2018.

The Bank warned inflation in Britain would once again be pushed higher by rising energy costs when regulator Ofgem lifts the price cap on household bills again this autumn.

Oil and gas has become increasing­ly expensive since Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, as Western countries tried to shun Russian supplies.

This means households and businesses will have less to spend elsewhere, causing economic output to shrink by 1pc in the fourth quarter of this year.

It will contract by 0.25pc across the whole of 2023, the Bank said.

But despite the worries about falling output, Threadneed­le Street said it was pushing ahead with plans to end its £895bn money-printing programme.

The scheme involved the Bank using its own cash to buy gilts and bonds – loans handed by investors to the Government and companies. Bank governor Andrew Bailey has now instructed employees at the Bank to ‘work on a strategy for UK government bond sales’.

He chose not to kick off the sales yesterday, instead saying they would start in September at the earliest.

‘Fed not acting excessivel­y hawkish’

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