Sterling Falls On Rate Rise

 | Nov 03, 2017 05:13AM ET

In line with market expectations, the Bank of England raised the UK base rate to 0.5% (from 0.25%) on Thursday. The rise, the first in 10 years, was widely expected as the UK has seen inflation well above the Bank of England’s target rate of 2.0% (3.0% in September), with Governor Carney stating “The pace at which the economy can grow without generating inflationary pressures has fallen relative to pre-crisis norms. This reflects persistent weakness in productivity growth since the crisis and, more recently, the more limited availability of labour.” Whilst the rate hike was already “priced-in” by the markets, GBP suffered losses of 1.8% against EUR and 1.5% against USD following the announcement. Many attribute the downward pressure on GBP because of Governor Carney hinting that rates would rise twice more in the next 3 years, with rates edging up to 1% by the end of 2020. The future pace of rate rises is exceptionally slow and it is based on a relatively gloomy growth outlook which resulted in the markets selling GBP against its peers.