We expect the MPC to vote unanimously to maintain the bank rate at 0.75%, with a non-negligible probability that a minority dissent in favor of an immediate hike.
Three months ago at the August meeting, the MPC voted unanimously to hike the bank rate by 25bp and said that further “gradual and limited†rate hikes were likely to be necessary over the forecast period in order to return inflation sustainably to the 2% target. However, BoE Governor Mark Carney sounded notably more cautious in the August Inflation Report press conference, saying that there was uncertainty over how households and firms would react to Brexit negotiations in the coming months and that the MPC needed to “walk, not run†in raising rates.
Recent data have been better than expected and, in the absence of Brexit-related uncertainty, might have led the MPC to hike again. Monthly GDP growth (3-month/3-month) rose to 0.7% in the three months to August. This will ease in the third quarter of 2018 as the positive base effect from the weather-hit weak March data falls out of the comparison, but the risks to the BoE’s projection for 0.4% qoq growth in the third quarter of 2018 are skewed to the upside. A key question for the MPC is how much of the recent strength is temporary (related to strong retail sales boosted by warm weather and the World Cup, as well as payback from the weak first quarter of 2018). The most striking data release of the last month was that regular pay growth rose 0.2pp to 3.1% yoy in the three months to August, its highest level since January 2009, but it is too early to conclude that pay growth has sustainably moved higher. Headline CPI inflation fell back to 2.4% yoy in September, reversing its rise to 2.7% in the previous month, but now is in line with the BoE’s August projection.
However, this better data news will likely take a back seat to Brexit negotiations, which remain at an impasse over the Irish border issue.
Britain on Wednesday said there was no set date for Brexit talks to finish, backtracking from a letter by Brexit minister Dominic Raab that suggested a deal on the terms of its departure from the European Union could be finalized by November 21.