Economy

Sterling drops as inflation cements BoE cut expectations, dollar up before US inflation

British ‌consumer price inflation fell to 3.2% in November, its lowest since March, from 3.6% in October, official figures showed.

 ‍Sterling fell on Wednesday after ‍British inflation unexpectedly fell sharply, a day before the Bank of England is widely expected to cut interest ​rates. The dollar rose as traders waited for U.S. inflation data for clues on the Federal Reserve’s next move.

Sterling was set for its biggest one-day ⁠drop since early November as investors added to bets that the BoE will cut rates on Thursday after data showed British inflation unexpectedly fell sharply ⁠in November.

British ‌consumer price inflation fell to 3.2% in November, its lowest since March, from 3.6% in October, official figures showed.

“The decline in inflation leaves little doubt about the cut we expect the BoE to deliver tomorrow,” said Modupe Adegbembo, Economist ⁠at Jefferies.

Recent data also supports a BoE cut with Britain’s wage growth moderating, price pressures easing alongside soft activity and the disinflationary impact of Budget measures, she added.

Sterling fell 0.7% to $1.3326, easing away from the two-month high it touched on Tuesday after data showed Britain’s unemployment rate hit its highest since the start of 2021 and private sector pay growth was the weakest in nearly ⁠five years in the run-up to the annual ​budget announcement last month.

Elsewhere, the dollar index, which measures the U.S. currency against six peers, rose 0.35% to 98.54, still not far from the lowest level since ‍early October hit on Tuesday. The index is down about 9.5% this year, on track for its steepest annual decline since 2017.

Traders are waiting for U.S. inflation data due ​on Thursday for more clues on what could be the Fed’s next move, after soft employment data earlier this week left markets and analysts unsure if the report had changed the policy outlook much.

“If CPI comes in as expected later this week then the Fed will definitely not be feeling pressure to ease at the next few meetings,” said Thomas Mathews, head of markets for Asia-Pacific at Capital Economics. “Even March may be a bit too soon to expect a cut.”

CENTRAL BANK MEETINGS IN FOCUS

The Fed cut rates as expected last week but signalled borrowing costs are unlikely to drop further in the near term, projecting just one more rate cut in 2026. But markets are pricing in two rate cuts next year, although a January move is unlikely.

Central banks are due to end the year with a ⁠bang with a host of policy decisions due this week which includes BoE and ECB ‌on Thursday and the Bank of Japan, expected to raise interest rates on Friday to a three-decade high.

The yen weakened 0.5% to 155.505 per dollar ahead of the BOJ meeting, where the focus will be on the forward guidance and where the policy rate is ‌headed in 2026.

The ⁠euro was 0.2% weaker at $1.1719, after touching a 12-week high on Tuesday ahead of the ECB policy decision, where the central bank is expected ⁠to hold rates steady. 

© ZAWYA

GLOBAL BUSINESS AND FINANCE MAGAZINE

Recent Posts

The macroeconomic impact of the Recovery and Resilience Facility: An analysis for Italy, Spain, and Greece

The EU Recovery and Resilience Facility was launched to support post-Covid recovery while accelerating structural…

1 day ago

Climate fairness, economic development, and Europe’s responsibility

The idea of equal cumulative emissions per person is simple: every individual should have an…

1 day ago

Mapping the world’s building regulations: new platform for smarter reforms

Every year, the world adds floor space equivalent to a city the size of Paris…

2 days ago

How large current account imbalances unwind: Evidence from historical adjustment episodes

Global imbalances are back in the policy debate. This column examines 70 current account adjustment…

2 days ago

Trapped at home: Climate stress is more likely to immobilise the poor than to move them

Climate-driven displacement is widely expected to push millions across international borders. Drawing on monthly bilateral…

2 days ago

Innovation without borders

Europe has devoted substantial resources to fostering innovation and AI diffusion, through both centralised EU…

4 days ago