British inflation unexpectedly slowed last month
for the first time since October, dousing expectations among investors
that the Bank of England might soon raise interest rates for the first
time in a decade.
Consumer prices rose by 2.6
percent compared with a year earlier, the Office for National Statistics
said on Tuesday, down from a nearly four-year high of 2.9 percent in
May.
Economists had expected the rate to remain unchanged.
Sterling
fell after the data, down by half a cent against the U.S. dollar, and
British government bond prices jumped as the figures suggested the BoE
was under little pressure to raise rates when it next meets in early
August, despite concerns among some of its policymakers about rising
prices.
The fall in inflation was the
sharpest between any two months since February 2015, largely reflecting a
fall in global oil prices, and there were also signs of slowing price
pressure in factories.
"This is going to kill
the chances of a rate rise in the short term. We will learn more about
the Bank of England's thinking in a couple of weeks, but we can expect
the calls for a rate rise to reduce to a whimper," Lucy O'Carroll, chief
economist at fund managers Aberdeen Asset Management, said.
However,
many economists have said they expect inflation to pick up again soon,
adding to the strain on households which are seeing salaries rise more
slowly than prices.
Britain's
inflation rate has risen sharply since last year's referendum decision
to leave the European Union which pushed down the value of the pound,
making imports more expensive.

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