|

UK: BoE seen on hold as prices rise – ING

ING’s James Smith notes that UK inflation rose to 3.3% in March on higher fuel costs and is likely to move towards 3.5–4% later in 2026, helped by July’s increase in household energy bills. Using ING’s Oil and natural gas assumptions, he expects inflation to peak slightly above 4%, but still sees no Bank of England (BoE) rate hikes this year.

Inflation seen peaking near four percent

"UK inflation rose in March on higher fuel prices, and a forthcoming increase in household energy bills this July is likely to take it towards 3.5-4%, depending on where wholesale natural gas prices go next. We don't think the bar for a Bank of England rate hike has been met."

"On ING’s base case for oil and natural gas prices – which has the former staying between 90-100 USD/bbl in the second and third quarters of the year, and the latter averaging 55 EUR/MWh this quarter – we’d expect UK inflation to peak fractionally above 4% in August/September, but generally bouncing around a 3.5-4% range in the second half of the year. That’s consistent with a 25% rise in household electricity/gas bills when the Ofgem price cap is next updated in July. And these forecasts assume some uptick in food inflation later this year."

"If wholesale prices stay where they are today, the July price cap is more likely to rise by a mere 10-15% and retrace much of that increase in October. That’s consistent with inflation peaking around 3.5%."

"So long as inflation doesn’t spike materially above 4% – a level above which the Bank has identified as being more likely to trigger a persistent bout of price pressure – we think the BoE will prefer to keep rates on hold this year."

"And against a fragile jobs market, we don’t expect a rate hike next week, or this year."

(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)

Author

FXStreet Insights Team

The FXStreet Insights Team is a group of journalists that handpicks selected market observations published by renowned experts. The content includes notes by commercial as well as additional insights by internal and external analysts.

More from FXStreet Insights Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

Japanese Yen gains ground as traders await Fed rate decision

The USD/JPY pair loses ground to near 160.25 during the early European trading hours. Traders prefer to wait on the sidelines ahead of the US Federal Reserve interest rate decision under new Chair Kevin Warsh later on Wednesday.

AUD/USD stays pressured; holds above 0.7050 as traders await Fed decision

The AUD/USD pair struggles to capitalize on the previous day's hawkish Reserve Bank of Australia-inspired bounce and trades with a negative bias for the second consecutive day on Wednesday. Spot prices, however, hold above the 0.7050 level as traders opt to wait for the outcome of a two-day FOMC policy meeting before placing fresh directional bets.

Gold trims intraday gains post-Fed, holds above $4,300

Gold trimmed intraday gains and trades flat for the day following the US Federal Reserve monetary policy decision. Markets read it as hawkish and jumped into the Greenback as policymakers removed references to additional rate adjustments from the statement.

Crypto Today: Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP trim breakout gains as focus shifts to Fed decision

Cryptocurrency prices broadly decline as investors show caution toward risk assets ahead of the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) interest rate decision on Wednesday.

Federal Reserve set to hold interest rates in Warsh's debut as chair

The United States Federal Reserve announces its interest rate decision on Wednesday, another pivotal meeting for markets to gauge the stance of policymakers and new Chair Kevin Warsh as energy prices retreat after the United States and Iran reached a framework deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.

Why a hawkish RBA is no longer enough to lift the Australian Dollar

The Reserve Bank of Australia delivered more than what markets expected: a hawkish hold that should have supported the Aussie. But markets widely ignored it, focusing instead on slowing economic growth and proving that central bank messaging alone isn’t always enough to drive currencies.