UK Inflation Hits 9% But It May Well Have Peaked

 | May 18, 2022 08:05AM ET

While there are plenty of upside risks to UK inflation, we suspect April's 9% figure will mark the peak. Certain goods categories will start to pull down the headline rate, even if further pressure in food and services is yet to come.

The key thing for the Bank of England is that inflation is likely to be below target by the end of 2023

UK inflation reached 9% in April as the well-telegraphed 54% increase in the household energy cap fed through to the CPI basket. That change in electricity and gas prices, combined with the recent pressure on petrol costs, means energy is now contributing three-and-a-half percentage points to the overall inflation rate.

The key question now is whether inflation has peaked, and we think the answer is probably yes. Admittedly a lot hinges on the next energy price cap announcement in October, which we expect will deliver around a 40% increase in prices—or 30% once the government’s £200/household rebate is factored in.

We don’t yet know exactly how that subsidy will be treated in the CPI figures, and while it is simply an accounting point, it might hold the key to answering whether we’ll get a second ‘twin peak’ in inflation later this year (the chart below assumes the rebate is factored in).

Energy is now contributing 3.5pp to overall inflation