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Bank of England's Mann sees no troubling inflation signs

Published 28/09/2021, 14:20
Updated 28/09/2021, 14:51
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: The Bank of England and the City of London financial district in London, Britain, November 5, 2020. REUTERS/John Sibley

LONDON (Reuters) -Bank of England interest rate-setter Catherine Mann said on Tuesday that inflation signals from financial markets and the labour market were not troubling, and there were signs that the pace of growth in energy prices was cooling.

"The signal there is not troubling," Mann said, referring to five-year ahead inflation expectations priced into financial markets. "Transitory, yes. Troubling, no."

Earlier on Tuesday a measure of five-year ahead inflation expectations in Britain rose to its highest since at least 2013.

Mann, speaking in a panel discussion organised by the United States' National Association for Business Economics, said there were no signs of a long-term spiral in inflation caused by businesses changing their pricing strategies.

Inflation in Britain has gathered steam as the country's economy bounces back from its nearly 10% slump last year and after a jump in energy prices around the world, as well as domestic supply chain bottlenecks and labour shortages.

The BoE last week raised slightly its forecast for inflation at the end of the year to over 4%, more than twice its target rate, and said the case for higher interest rates appeared to have strengthened.

Mann said she thought expectations among investors of a first BoE rate hike earlier in 2022 than previously priced would also diminish the chances of an inflation surge.

Financial markets currently price in a first increase in BoE rates to 0.25% from 0.1% by February, with a second rate hike to 0.5% by September 2022.

The BoE said last week it expected Britain's inflation overshoot would be temporary, but two policymakers called for an immediate halt to its 895 billion-pound ($1.22 trillion) bond purchase programme, which is due to run until year-end.

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($1 = 0.7311 pounds)

Latest comments

The joke is, inflation is mostly energy based (affecting everything else). Call me an old cynic, after 30 years of trading, I’ve no doubt that energy price rises (and crises) are driven by vested interests - manipulated by the largest oil producers (namely the USA, Saudi), and the richest individuals (namely the likes of Abdul Aziz Bin Salaman).
yes OPEC is a cartel
the storm will increase US shale oil profits, and slow down the Chinese economic recovery. All in all though, I have to be bullish on the returns of Chinese stocks at current levels. We simply cannot ignore stocks with a billion consumers trading at a discount of 50%.
Cost of borrowing to increase 400% by Sep 2022 … what knock on effects?
haha
🙈
The guy is lying.
The bank of England has lost control of inflation. They are funding the government at all costs so expect inflation to soar much higher.
I see said the blind man
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