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101. Inflation data in spotlight after rate shock
Since the Bank of England caught markets on the hop by raising interest rates last week, investors have speculated that Tuesday's inflation data could throw up some nasty surprises.
16 Jan 2007
102. Bank of England set to leave rates unchanged
The Bank of England looks set to leave interest rates at 5 percent on Thursday but above target inflation, a robust housing market and sizzling services sector mean it may not wait long before raising them.
11 Jan 2007
103. Bank of England set to leave rates on hold
The Bank of England is likely to hold borrowing costs at 5.0 percent this week but expectations of higher borrowing costs in February are growing following a series of strong economic barometers.
08 Jan 2007
104. Rising price pressures fuel rate hike bets
Inflation is at a multi year high and workers expect no let up in price pressures, so investors are betting the Bank of England may have to hike interest rates again to head off inflationary wage deals.
18 Dec 2006
105. BoE's Gieve: Markets may be underestimating risk
Financial markets may not be properly pricing in risks, the Bank's Deputy Governor John Gieve warned on Thursday.
14 Dec 2006
106. Inflation expectations rise in Nov
Expectations of future inflation have risen to match their highest level since comparable records began more than six years ago, a survey published by the Bank of England showed on Thursday.
14 Dec 2006
107. Bank holds rates steady at 5 percent
The Bank of England kept interest rates unchanged on Thursday and economists are divided over whether two hikes in borrowing costs in the past four months have done enough to curb inflation. Economists polled by Reuters last week had unanimously forecast the bank would leave rates at 5 percent and market reaction was minimal. The outlook, however, is less clear and much will depend on the level of wage settlements in the crucial New Year pay round. "Today's decision was no surprise but people should not be fooled into thinking interest rates have definitely peaked," said Graeme Leach, chief economist at the Institute of Directors. "It is still a 50:50 call as to whether interest rates go up again in the New Year." The economy has given out mixed signals in recent weeks. The housing market and services sector continue to accelerate but manufacturing activity and consumer spending appear to be slowing. Annual house price inflation hit a 20-month high in November, according to Halifax data, while the country's services sector grew at its fastest pace last month in almost three years. RETAIL GLOOM Manufacturers and retailers, however, look to be having a tougher time. Data on Wednesday showed industrial output contracted in October for the first time in over a year and anecdotal evidence suggests consumers are tightening the purse strings. Shares in Woolworths fell sharply this week when it became the first high street store to warn on Christmas profits and the British Retail Consortium said the value of sales grew last month at the slowest annual rate since March. The pound's rise to a six-year high in trade-weighted terms has also entered the monetary policy debate, by dampening import price inflation and making exports more expensive. "There is clear weakness in manufacturing and a murky outlook for retail sales which may make the Bank think twice before raising rates again," said Brian Hilliard, chief economist at Societe Generale. "The exchange rate is also a factor and yet to be reflected in the data." The Bank remains upbeat on the growth outlook and predicts the economy will expand 3 percent next year. Nevertheless recent comments from the bank's rate-setters have highlighted growing divisions on the policy committee. Deputy Governor Rachel Lomax, who joined David Blanchflower in opposing last month's rate rise, said lower oil prices and a stronger pound have improved the inflation outlook. Fellow committee members Charles Bean and John Gieve, however, have highlighted upside risks to the inflation outlook.
07 Dec 2006
108. Bank unexpectedly voted 7-2 for Nov rate rise
Two of the Bank of England's nine strong Monetary Policy Committee unexpectedly opposed this month's decision to raise interest rates by a quarter point to 5.0 percent.
22 Nov 2006
109. Property sales fell sharply in October
The number of property transactions in England and Wales fell sharply in October to their lowest level in more than a year, tax authority data showed on Tuesday.
22 Nov 2006
110. Bank raises interest rates to 5.0 percent
The Bank of England raised interest rates on Thursday by a quarter point to 5.0 percent, their highest level in 5 years, in order to restrain building inflationary pressures.
09 Nov 2006
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