Bank of England raises rates to 3.5%, says inflation has peaked

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(This Dec. 15 story has been corrected to change Robert Dishner's location to London from Chicago in paragraph 33)

LONDON (Reuters) - The Bank of England on Thursday raised interest rates by a widely expected 50 basis points (bps) to 3.50%, in its ninth straight increase - and its eighth this year.

The BoE, which is battling double-digit inflation that has unleashed a cost-of-living crisis that is pushing the economy deeper into recession, has raised rates by a combined 325 bps in 2022 alone to their highest since late 2008.

UK rates began rising in December 2021, making the BoE the first of the world's major central banks to kick off a monetary policy-tightening cycle.

BoE Governor Andrew Bailey, in a letter to finance minister Jeremy Hunt accompanying the decision, said the BoE forecasts suggested British inflation, which dropped below October's 41-year highs to 10.7% last month, had reached its peak.

Furthermore, a breakdown of votes by Monetary Policy Committee members showed policymakers divided.

Some voted for an outsized 75-bps rise, while others said now was the time to stop tightening monetary policy altogether.

The pound fell, while benchmark British government bond yields declined, falling 6 basis points to 3.24%.

MARKET REACTION:

STOCKS: London's blue-chip FTSE 100 index briefly losses and was last down 0.5%, while the FTSE 250, a more domestic-focused index of mid-cap stocks, was down 0.4%.

FOREX: Sterling fell against the dollar, to last trade down 0.8% at $1.2332, little changed from where it was prior to the central bank's decision.

MONEY MARKETS: Interest rate swaps showed investors expected rates to peak at 4.46% by next August, compared with an anticipated terminal rate of 4.53% just before the decision.

COMMENTS:

VIVEK PAUL, UK CHIEF INVESTMENT STRATEGIST, BLACKROCK INVESTMENT INSTITUTE, LONDON:

"There are going to be more rate hikes. They're not done. There's an element that the bank will stop a little bit before what markets are currently anticipating them to get to. Their own numbers have been pointing to a recession for a little while, and they've still materially hiked interest rates. Despite that, so I don't think that's going to stop them."

EDWARD HUTCHINGS, HEAD OF RATES, AVIVA INVESTORS, LONDON:

"The Bank of England duly delivered on financial markets expectations of a 0.50% hike. With a 3-way split vote, it seems there is still much uncertainty amongst MPC members.

However, the Minutes state that the BoE do expect a recession for a ‘prolonged period’! After its recent bullish run, sterling strength could be somewhat more questionable from here and with further Quantitative Tightening to come plus a staggering amount of gilt issuance, 2023 will continue to be volatile for the UK gilt market"