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UK Firms Report Biggest Jump in Price Expectations in nearly 2 yrs, BoE Survey

LONDON, April 2 (Reuters) - British companies expect to raise prices more quickly in the coming 12 months as they respond to a surge in energy prices ​due to the Iran war, cut jobs and raise pay by less than before, a ‌Bank of England survey showed on Thursday.

The BoE is keeping a close watch on companies' pricing plans as it tries to gauge how much of the spike in energy prices caused by the Iran war will be passed on ​and push up inflation.

The monthly Decision Maker Panel showed firms polled in March expected to ​raise their prices by 3.7% over the next year, the most since October.

This rate ⁠was up from 3.4% among firms surveyed in February, before the start of the conflict, and ​represents the biggest month-to-month increase in the rate since April 2024.

BoE Governor Andrew Bailey told Reuters in an ​interview on Wednesday that firms had limited pricing power to pass on cost increases to their customers although some pass-through of higher energy costs was likely.

Firms' expected year-ahead wage growth fell to 3.5% on a three-month moving-average basis in March ​and 3.4% on a monthly basis, both the lowest since the series started in 2022.

Companies also said ​they expected to cut jobs, with average staffing levels expected to fall 0.3% over the coming year compared with ‌a 0.3% ⁠increase expected in February.

Businesses expected consumer price inflation of 3.5% in the coming 12 months, the highest since December 2023 and 0.5 percentage points higher than in February, making it the biggest month-on-month jump since September 2022.

"More dovish members on the Monetary Policy Committee will likely be tempted to discount that ​increase as news-driven noise for ​now. But rate setters ⁠will be acutely aware of other measures of households' inflation expectations jumping recently ... so risks of second-round effects will remain a major worry," said Elliott Jordan-Doak, ​senior economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics.

Britain's headline rate of inflation held at 3.0% in ​February and ⁠had been expected to fall to near the BoE's 2% target in April before the Middle East conflict, but the BoE now forecasts it will rise towards 3.5% in the middle of the year.

Investors added to their ⁠bets on ​interest rate hikes by the central bank on Thursday and ​are fully pricing in two quarter-point hikes this year.

The BoE survey was conducted from March 6-20, after the U.S.-Israeli attacks on ​Iran started on February 28, and received 2,004 responses.

Reporting by Suban Abdulla; editing by David Milliken, Alexandra Hudson

Source: Reuters


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