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UK Shares Edge Higher as Benign Inflation Reassures

May 20 (Reuters) - UK shares rose marginally ​on Wednesday after softer-than-expected April inflation offered relief to investors, ‌though sceptics warned the reprieve would be temporary.

The blue-chip FTSE 100 index gained 0.13% as of 10:40 am GMT, while the midcap FTSE 250 climbed 0.29%.

  • Consumer prices in ​April rose by an annual rate of 2.8%, compared with March's figures ​of 3.3% and expectations of 3.0%.

  • That prompted some analysts to ⁠question the need for rapid rate hikes by the Bank of England, ​especially as data released on Tuesday also showed the unemployment rate ticking up.

  • "We ​continue to think markets are overestimating the Bank of England's willingness to tighten policy," said James Smith, developed markets economist, UK, at ING.

  • On Monday, the International Monetary Fund had ​also said that the central bank may not need to raise rates to ​get inflation down to its target.

  • Still, others warned that inflation may tick up in ‌the ⁠coming months as the impact of higher oil prices due to disruption in the Strait of Hormuz flows through.

  • "Some people might be scratching their heads that the headline inflation figure for April came in at just 2.8%. ​But this bright spot ​is set to ⁠be relegated to the past in the months to come," said Danni Hewson, head of financial analysis at ​AJ Bell.

  • Aerospace and defence stocks rose 1.6%, thanks to ​a 3.2% ⁠gain in shares of defence contractor Babcock International Group after Peel Hunt upgraded the stock to "buy" from "add".

  • Retailer Marks & Spencer rose 4.2% and was the biggest gainer on ⁠the ​FTSE 100 after forecasting it will return to profit ​growth this year.

  • Investors are also contending with a noisy political backdrop, as questions about Prime Minister ​Keir Starmer's future persist.

Reporting by Niket Nishant in Bengaluru; Editing by Vijay Kishore

Source: Reuters


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