Home Business NewsBank of England must cut rates despite hotter-than-expected inflation

Bank of England must cut rates despite hotter-than-expected inflation

by Thea Coates Finance Reporter
16th Jul 25 7:53 am

The Bank of England should press ahead with cutting interest rates next month โ€“ despite a surprise uptick in inflation โ€“ says the CEO of one of the worldโ€™s largest independent financial advisory and asset management organisations.

UK headline inflation rose to 3.6% in June, data from the Office for National Statistics showed on Wednesday, ahead of the 3.4% expected by economists and unchanged from the previous month.

Core inflation, which strips out volatile food and energy prices, also ticked higher to 3.7% from 3.5% in May.

However, the chief executive of deVere Group, Nigel Green, says the marginal overshoot is no reason for the central bank to delay a rate cut in August โ€“ which markets widely expect and which he believes would be a โ€œbold and correct call.โ€

โ€œThereโ€™s no question the latest inflation data will spark some jitters,โ€ he says.

โ€œBut one slightly hotter-than-expected reading should not knock the Bank off course. A cut next month is still warranted โ€“ and, frankly, necessary.โ€

He continues: โ€œInflation has fallen considerably from its double-digit peak. What weโ€™re seeing now is the bumpy endgame. The disinflationary trend remains intact, but it was never going to be perfectly smooth.โ€

Nigel Green notes that UK wage growth is softening, job vacancies are falling, and the broader economy remains under pressure from the Bankโ€™s tight policy stance over the past two years.

โ€œThe real risk now is overkill,โ€ he warns. โ€œWith inflation moving in the right direction and the labour market starting to weaken, holding rates too high for too long could do unnecessary damage.โ€

The deVere CEO argues that the Bank of England is in a different position to the US Federal Reserve, where services inflation remains stickier and the economy is running hotter.

โ€œThe UK is not the US. Britainโ€™s economy is more fragile, and our inflation outlook more benign. The BoE has room to move and should take it.โ€

His comments come just days after BoE Governor Andrew Bailey said rates were โ€œon a downward pathโ€ and hinted the Bank would be prepared to move more decisively if labour market slack increases.

Markets are still pricing in a 25-basis point rate cut at the Monetary Policy Committeeโ€™s 6 August meeting, which would bring the base rate down from its current 4.25%.

Nigel Green says a summer rate cut would offer โ€œtimely and targeted supportโ€ to households and businesses at a point when economic momentum risks stalling.

โ€œToo many consumers are still feeling the aftershocks of the cost-of-living crisis,โ€ he says. โ€œMortgage holders are under pressure, and confidence remains fragile. A well-judged rate cut would help to steady the ship.โ€

He adds that delaying action until inflation drops below 2% could โ€œtrap the economy in a prolonged slump.โ€

โ€œCentral banks are meant to look forward, not react to each data print. Waiting for perfect numbers is a mistake. The time to act is when the broad conditions warrant it โ€“ and they do.โ€

The deVere CEO also believes a rate cut would help restore balance to the pound, which has remained relatively strong this year, making UK exports less competitive.

โ€œThe Bank doesnโ€™t target sterling, but it canโ€™t ignore it either. A more competitive currency would help growth at the margins and ease some imported inflation,โ€ he says.

With the European Central Bank and Bank of Canada already cutting, and the Fed preparing the ground for a move, Nigel Green says the Bank of England risks being โ€œthe laggardโ€ unless it shows leadership.

โ€œCaution has its place, but not when it leads to paralysis,โ€ he concludes.

โ€œA rate cut in August would be a clear signal that the Bank is serious about supporting growth, jobs and stability, while staying alert to inflation risks. Itโ€™s the right move, at the right time.โ€

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