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JPM Delays BoE Rate Hike View to Nov on Inflation Risks

(Reuters) - J.P. Morgan on Thursday pushed back to November its forecast for ​the Bank of England's next interest rate increase, ‌after the central bank kept rates steady at 3.75% amid uncertainty over inflation risks stemming from the Middle East tensions.

The ​brokerage had previously expected a 25-basis-point increase in July. 

The central bank's ​decision came after a much-anticipated truce deal was signed ⁠between U.S. President Donald Trump and Iran to end ​the conflict.

While Governor Andrew Bailey said he was "very encouraged" ​by the deal, he said he was not convinced it would stall a further rise in British inflation.

Persistent inflation, led by ​oil price shocks, has kept central banks around ​the world waiting for more evidence before setting their interest rate ‌trajectories.

"If ⁠growth and the labour market recover as inflation picks up further in 2H26, this could lead to stronger pass-through effects into core and wages," J.P.Morgan said in ​a note.

The Bank ​of Japan ⁠and the European Central Bank have raised rates in the past week, while ​hawkish projections from U.S. Federal Reserve policymakers ​have signalled ⁠higher borrowing costs this year.

"If a range of other central banks tighten due to a mix of resilience ⁠in ​the global growth outlook and inflation ​concerns, we doubt the BoE would sit and hold," J.P. Morgan added.

Reporting ​by Kanchana Chakravarty in Bengaluru; Editing by Tasim Zahid

Source: Reuters


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