
The Office for National Statistics (ONS) has this morning released inflation figures for the UK for October 2024.
October 2024 Consumer Prices Index (CPI) climbed a substantial 0.6% to 2.3% pa from 1.7% pa (September). That said, CPI is only back to levels just above what we saw in August and July’s at 2.2% pa.
Upward pressure came from Owner Occupiers Housing (OOH) costs which increased by a massive 7.4% pa, still stubbornly high up from 7.2% pa last month. Alcohol, tobacco, health, communications, and restaurants/hotels were also big contributors.
Downward pressure came from transport, recreation, and furniture costs. So, there is some respite, but the overall trend was upwards.
RPI Up by 0.7%
The old measure of inflation RPI, an arithmetical mean of the average prices of a basket of household spending (rather than the geometric mean for CPI) and still our preferred measure of real inflation, climbed an even bigger 0.7% to 3.4% pa in October. This merely took back the 0.8% fall in September’s RPI, but we are still below August’s figure of 3.5% pa. RPI remains stubborn and this increase bucks the trend of consistent falls over the last year.
Comment
Last month we were bullish about a Bank of England interest rate cut in both November and December 2024. We got November’s 0.25% cut to 4.75% but we cannot see a rate cut on 19 December with most commentators and even mortgage lenders expecting a rate increase. This is evidenced by there being n fixed rate mortgage deals below 4% pa now and many deals now back above 5% pa.
It could be yet another painful few months with an interest rate increase before inflation and rates fall back in Q1 and Q2 of 2025. On a happier note, £Sterling will no doubt rise today meaning the cost of imports including food will fall slightly.
Key dates for us all:
A Happy Christmas? We think not for prices and interest rates.