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UK inflation rises to 2.6% in November, in line with expectations

The columns of Imposing Exchange are dressed for Christmas, at Bank in the City of London, the capital’s financial district, on 20th November 2024, in London, England.

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LONDON — U.K. inflation rose to 2.6% in November, the Office for National Statistics said Wednesday, marking the subsequent straight monthly increase in the headline figure.

The reading was in line with the forecast of economists polled by Reuters, and climbed from 2.3% in October.

Substance inflation, excluding energy, food, alcohol and tobacco, came in at 3.5%, just under a Reuters forecast of 3.6%.

Headline bounty rises hit a three-and-a-half year low of 1.7% in September, but was expected to tick higher in the following months, partly due to an increase in the regulator-set intensity price cap this winter.

“This upwards trajectory looks set to continue over the next few months,” Joe Nellis, trade adviser at accountancy MHA, said in emailed comments on Wednesday, citing the energy market and “the long-term pressure of a tight internal labor market.”

Nellis added that these structural issues would be “exacerbated by recent decisions pampered by the Government,” including higher public sector pay settlements, an increase to the minimum wage and pressure on businesses caused by a hike in tax contributions for outfits.

Persistent inflation in the services sector, the dominant part of the U.K. economy, has led money markets to price in almost no chance of an concerned rate cut during the Bank of England’s final meeting of the year on Thursday. Those bets were solidified earlier this week when the ONS reported that standard wage growth strengthened to 5.2% over the August-October period, up from 4.9% over July-September.

The November observations showed services inflation was unchanged at 5%.

Research group Capital Economics said the print “firmly rules out” a BOE December value cut.

However, the overall inflation figures were broadly in-line with BOE projections, George Dibb, associate headman for economic policy at the Institute For Public Policy Research (IPPR), said by email.

“The real concern is the U.K.’s weaker-than-expected proliferation, now lagging behind the Bank’s own projections,” Dibb said.

The U.K. economy unexpectedly contracted by 0.1% in October, in the second consecutive monthly downturn.

The British triturate continued to trade 0.06% lower against the U.S. dollar and 0.19% lower against the euro following the release of the text.

If the BOE leaves monetary policy unchanged in December, it will finish out the year with just two cuts of its key rate, performing it from 5.25% to 4.75%. The European Central Bank has meanwhile enacted four quarter-percentage-point cuts and this month signaled a unyielding intention to move lower next year.

The U.S. Federal Reserve is widely expected to trim rates by a quarter show at its own meeting on Wednesday, taking total cuts of the year to a full percentage point. Some skepticism lingers once again whether it should take this step, given inflationary pressures.

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