The Bank of England will decide today on whether to raise interest rates for the first time in three years.
Speculation has been growing that Bank rate will increase from 0.1% to 0.25% in response to rising inflation.
The rate was cut to a record low of 0.1% in March last year as lockdowns put the UK economy into deep freeze.
But as restrictions are eased, demand is returning and, with supply chains strained too, inflation has been increasing.
That has put pressure on the Bank to hike rates – the tool traditionally used by officials to keep a lid on spiralling prices.
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If interest rates do rise, what will it mean for you?
BORROWERS
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Industry body UK Finance estimates that 26% of residential mortgages are on variable rates, translating to around 2.2 million borrowers.
Of those, some 850,000 have tracker deals directly linked to the Bank rate and 1.1 million are on lenders’ standard variable rates (SVRs), which might be expected to be increased too in response to any Bank of England hike.
A 0.15 percentage point increase for a borrower with a typical £250,000 mortgage would add £228 a year to repayments, according to figures from investment platform AJ Bell.
The 74% of home loans where rates have been fixed for a set period – which include 96% of those taken out since 2019 – will not be affected immediately.
However, analysis by financial information website Defaqto shows that, in anticipation of a rate hike, ultra-low rate fixed deals have been disappearing from the market in recent months.
It found that on 25 October there were 82 fixed-rate mortgages available at 0.84% to 0.99% but that by Tuesday this week this had fallen to 22.
SAVERS
Savers have been squeezed by ultra-low rates, which mean the value of their nest eggs is not keeping up with inflation.
According to Moneyfacts.co.uk, the average easy access savings account on the market pays 0.19% while the average easy access ISA pays 0.26%.
That compares with 0.64% and 0.94% averages for those two savings product types three years ago.
Locking your money away for a fixed period can mean a better deal.
According to AJ Bell, the top two-year fixed rate is currently paying 1.76%, compared to the market-leading easy access savings rate of 0.65%.
For the two-year deal, that fixed rate would yield £355.10 in interest by the end of the period.
A 0.15 percentage point increase would add an extra £30.
But Sarah Pennells, consumer finance specialist at Royal London, cautioned that there was no guarantee that savings rates will rise straight away in response to a Bank hike.
UK long-term borrowing costs have hit their highest level since 1998.
The unwanted milestone for the Treasury’s coffers was reached ahead of an auction of 30-year bonds, known as gilts, this morning.
The yield – the effective interest rate demanded by investors to hold UK public debt – peaked at 5.21%.
At that level, it is even above the yield seen in the wake of the mini-budget backlash of 2022 when financial markets baulked at the Truss government’s growth agenda which contained no independent scrutiny from the Office for Budget Responsibility.
The premium is up, market analysts say, because of growing concerns the Bank of England will struggle to cut interest rates this year.
Just two cuts are currently priced in for 2025 as investors fear policymakers’ hands could be tied by a growing threat of stagflation.
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The jargon essentially covers a scenario when an economy is flatlining at a time of rising unemployment and inflation.
Growth has ground to a halt, official data and private surveys have shown, since the second half of last year.
Critics of the government have accused Sir Keir Starmer and his chancellor, Rachel Reeves, of talking down the economy since taking office in July amid their claims of needing to fix a “£22bn black hole” in the public finances.
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Chancellor reacts to inflation rise
Both warned of a tough budget ahead. That first fiscal statement put businesses and the wealthy on the hook for £40bn of tax rises.
Corporate lobby groups have since warned of a hit to investment, pay growth and jobs to help offset the additional costs.
At the same time, consumer spending has remained constrained amid stubborn price growth elements in the economy.
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Higher borrowing costs also reflect a rising risk premium globally linked to the looming return of Donald Trump as US president and his threats of universal trade tariffs.
The higher borrowing bill will pose a problem for Ms Reeves as she seeks to borrow more to finance higher public investment and spending.
Tuesday’s auction saw the Debt Management Office sell £2.25bn of 30-year gilts to investors at an average yield of 5.198%.
It was the highest yield for a 30-year gilt since its first auction in May 1998, Refinitiv data showed.
This extra borrowing could mean Ms Reeves is at risk of breaking the spending rules she created for herself, to bring down debt, and so she may have less money to spend, analysts at Capital Economics said.
“There is a significant chance that the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) will judge that the Chancellor Rachel Reeves is on course to miss her main fiscal rule when it revises its forecasts on 26 March. To maintain fiscal credibility, this may mean that Ms Reeves is forced to tighten fiscal policy further,” said Ruth Gregory, the deputy chief UK economist at Capital Economics.
Shop prices will rise in 2025 as the key Christmas trading period failed to meet retailers’ expectations, according to industry data.
Shop sales grew just 0.4% in the so-called golden quarter, the critical three shopping months from October to December, according to the British Retail Consortium (BRC) and big four accounting company KPMG.
Many retailers rely on trade during this period to see them through tougher months such as January and February. Some make most of their yearly revenue over Christmas.
The minimal growth came amid weak consumer confidence and difficult economic conditions, the lobby group said, and “reflected the ongoing careful management of many household budgets”, KPMG’s UK head of consumer, retail and leisure Linda Ellett said.
Non-food sales were the worst hit in the four weeks up to 28 December, figures from the BRC showed and were actually less than last year, contracting 1.5%.
What were people buying?
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Food sales grew 3.3% across all of 2024, compared to 2023.
In the festive period beauty products, jewellery and electricals did well, the BRC’s chief executive Helen Dickinson said.
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Poundland customers left Christmas shopping late
AI-enabled tech and beauty advent calendars boosted festive takings, Ms Ellett said.
What it means for next year
With employer costs due to rise in April as the minimum wage and employers’ national insurance contributions are upped, businesses will face higher wage bills.
The BRC estimates there is “little hope” of covering these costs through higher sales, so retailers will likely push up prices and cut investment in stores and jobs, “harming our high streets and the communities that rely on them”, Ms Dickinson said.
Separate figures from high street bank Barclays showed card spending remained flat since December 2023, while essential spending fell 3% partly as inflation concerns forced consumers to cut back but also through lower fuel costs.
The majority of those surveyed by the lender (86%) said they were concerned about rising food costs and 87% were concerned about household bills.
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Numerous UK retail giants will update shareholders on their Christmas performance this week including high street bellwether Next on Tuesday, Marks and Spencer and Tesco on Thursday and Sainsbury’s on Friday.