Where does the City think inflation will peak?

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 Chief economist, UK at Handelsbanken James Sproule:

‘The surge in inflation has clearly been the economic story of 2022, and gas prices – driven by the Ukrainian crisis – have been the driving force of that double digit inflation. 

‘At the same time, global economies are highly dynamic and the dramatic spike in input costs is triggering an economic slowdown in the UK, and across Europe, as well as in places such as China. 

‘Even if the Ukrainian crisis continues, this broader economic slowdown is going to lessen gas demand a good deal in coming months. 

‘Whether this lower demand, along with the new Prime Minister’s as yet unknown assistance, will be enough to lower inflation remains to be seen, but a further surge to 18 percent seems a pessimistic step too far.’

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Head of market analysis at Brewin Dolphin Janet Mui: 

‘Putting a numerical forecast on inflation has always been difficult in normal times. The uncertainty and volatility of European gas prices make the task even tougher.

‘The Bank of England has consistently underestimate inflation for the past year and July’s inflation already reached 10.1 per cent vs 9.9 per cent forecasted at its August report.

‘Given another double-digit surge in European benchmark gas prices this week as Russia will shut its Nord Stream pipeline for three days of maintenance work from 31 August, more price pressures are building in the quarters ahead.

‘Private sector economists can revise their inflation forecasts much quicker in reaction to market movements, and we will sure see more financial institutions making these bold statements. 

‘This will further hit the public mood and risk putting consumers and companies off spending.

‘The latest UK industry surveys showed a significant weakening in manufacturing activity due to the high cost of doing business and weak demand. While the services sector is still holding up, households’ finances are set to be tested and stretched to an extent not seen in many years.’

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Global markets strategist at eToro Ben Laidler: 

‘The Bank of England’s forecast for inflation to peak at 13% early next year, made only three weeks ago, seemed apocalyptic to many at the time but now looks conservative.

‘The main culprit has been the 60 per cent surge in UK natural gas prices since the end of July as Russia further restricted supplies to Europe and the continent struggles to rebuild storage ahead of the winter.

‘Ever higher natural gas prices impact consumer costs, through the energy price cap, and directly hit many businesses. They exacerbate the existing strong price pressures driven by Brent oil prices at $100/barrel and UK unemployment at a generational low.

‘Short-term hopes are pinned on the fact gas prices can fall as fast as they rise, with two 60 per cent price falls in the past year alone. A fall could be driven by extra supplies from Russia, the filling of winter storage, or less demand from squeezed customers.’

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Fixed income investment manager at Aegon Asset Management James Lynch:

‘[Inflation] is of course going to get worse, and that is down to energy. Of the 13 per cent inflation the BoE expects at the end of the year, 6 per cent of it is energy. It is getting to the point that according to EDF half of UK households will be in fuel poverty by January. 

‘You would imagine from a political point of view that these regulated energy inflation price rises are unsustainable and would require a response, not only for households but small businesses.

‘The response from the new government will determine how high they are willing to let inflation go (given they could, in theory, control the volatile cause). 

‘The cost of any package could be eye watering, which will likely be met by an increase in debt issuance. And this at a time when the BoE will be selling government bonds, not buying them.’  

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UK chief investment strategist for the BlackRock Investment Institute Vivek Paul: 

‘While increased energy prices have contributed to a higher CPI, the cost-of-living crisis is not just a story about food and energy – it did not just begin with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. 

‘Core inflation, which strips out food and energy, was at 6.2 per cent in July – over three times the Bank of England’s (BoE) target. The problem in the UK is one of unusually low level of production capacity as a result of low labour supply. 

‘There are fewer eligible workers, and companies are finding it harder than usual to fill vacancies from those who are unemployed. This is a structural issue – not just a near term one – in the absence of significant policy intervention. On top of this, still-volatile energy markets mean the headline inflation prints could get materially higher still in the coming months.’

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