Friday 08 August 2025 1:48 pm
Rachel Reeves now faces a difficult lead-up to the Autumn Budget after the Bank of Englandâs âhawkish cutâ. Isabel Infantes/PA Wire
Markets are indicating interest rates are set to stay higher for longer than expected after the Bank of Englandâs âhawkish cutâ and gloomy inflation and growth forecasts shocked City analysts.
Prior to the Bankâs interest rate cuts, markets had all but priced in a further 25 basis point cut by the end of the year, which would bring borrowing costs down to the lowest level since 2022.Â
But the minutes from the latest Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting showed hawks becoming more worried about food price inflation. Markets reacted by repricing the risk of further cuts during the rest of the year. Traders now believe thereâs only a 50 per cent chance of a cut in November.Â
UBS economist Anna Titareva said the MPCâs assumptions of high inflation affecting the path of interest rates were âstrikingâ.Â
Analysts at Capital Economics and Oxford Economics were among those who said they were âless confidentâ of another rate cut taking place in November to get interest rates down to 3.75 per cent.Â
âIf inflation continues to surprise to the upside, this could tip the balance towards no change, particularly if market pricing moves against a rate cut,â said Oxford Economicsâ Andrew Goodwin.Â
âWith Governor Andrew Bailey now clearly the committeeâs swing voter, his comments will also prove key.â
Interest rates set to generate a headache for Rachel Reeves
Rachel Reeves has praised successive interest rate cuts over the last year, claiming they would help mortgage holders and allow businesses to borrow more for growth.Â
Lower rates could also boost UK growth, which has slowed this year. The economy has experienced two consecutive contractions in April and May, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).Â
But more pertinently to public finances, lower interest rates can help to ease borrowing costs for Reeves while the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR)âs own forecasts hinge on market predictions on monetary policy.Â
In a press conference on Thursday, Bailey declined to comment on how the Bank would react to further tax rises, with the Bank claiming that last yearâs Autumn Budget dampened UK GDP.Â
The National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) suggested the government faced a ÂŁ50bn black hole in public finances, while The Guardian reported on Friday that Rachel Reeves and Keir Starmer would hold meetings on possible tax hikes.
Sandra Horsfield, senior financial markets economist, said âdiscussions behind closed doorsâ would have likely considered the consequences of the OBR downgrading productivity forecasts, which would cost the government billions of pounds.Â
AJ Bellâs head of investment analysis Laith Khalaf said there was little chance of Reeves seeing the âwindfallâ of a surprise interest rate cut at the next decision in September.
Khalaf also said âpensioners have something to cheerâ about after the Bank revised its inflation forecast for September up to four per cent.Â
The triple lock on the state pension, which means it increases each year by whichever is highest out of inflation or wage growth in September, could lead to an addition of around ÂŁ478 to annual payments and cost Reeves billions of pounds more than expected.Â
âItâs possible that wage growth may trump inflation, and pensioners get an even bigger bump in their income,â Khalaf said.Â
âBut if the Bank of England is right about inflation, then pensioners can look forward to a rise of at least four per cent in their state pension next year.Â
âNo doubt this will once again raise questions about the fairness of the triple lock, especially against a fiscal backdrop which suggests the chancellor is going to have to stick a shovel into taxpayersâ pockets again in the autumn Budget.â
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