LONDON (MarketWatch) -- U.K. annual inflation in consumer prices reached 3.1% in March, up from 2.8% in February, driven by a rise in the price of food and non-alcoholic beverages, the Office for National Statistics said Tuesday. The jump in inflation above 3% means the Bank of England's governor, Mervyn King, will have to write to Gordon Brown, the chancellor of the exchequer, explaining why inflation continues to run above the government's 2% target.
UK CPI hits 3.1%, sterling hits $2
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UK CPI hits 3.1%, sterling hits $2
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- Totally_Baffled
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I noticed on the BBC web site this article :
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/6563013.stm
Near the end the question is :
So I'd expect the answer to be : Yes, there will be more upward pressure on inflation and a risk of further rate rises.
I wonder what others think?
Pete M
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/6563013.stm
Near the end the question is :
Part of the answer is :Will we see a return to high inflation and high rates, then?
This doesnt match my expectations. I had imagined that with summer electricity demand, generation issues etc the cost would go up. Then coming into winter Id expect further upward pressure on prices.And energy prices are coming down too, especially for household energy like gas.
So I'd expect the answer to be : Yes, there will be more upward pressure on inflation and a risk of further rate rises.
I wonder what others think?
Pete M
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Could it be the right time to import Solar panels from the states? Anyone fancy sharing a container?On a positive note, now is the time to buy cheap stuff from America.
I have no idea how to go about this and I assume that the shipping costs would outweigh the savings but if the dollar keeps dropping it might become possible.
Pete M
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I noticed that Mervyn King's letter to Gordon Brown blamed high oil prices for inflation. I wonder how that works, given that they were higher still last summer...? I suspect it's got more to do with a couple of years' worth of high oil prices finally feeding through in second-round effects, along with biofuels and bad weather reducing food production.
Hurricane season's only 6 weeks away too, and unless we get a quiet season for the GOM like last year, then prices will probably set another new record.
Hurricane season's only 6 weeks away too, and unless we get a quiet season for the GOM like last year, then prices will probably set another new record.
That and increasing the money supply by 10+% every year - got to find a home eventually. Inflation really isn't going away any time soon - and they're making it all much worse by pretending it'll go away. I hope they get what they deserve when this is all over as it is going to a right royal mess.mikepepler wrote:I noticed that Mervyn King's letter to Gordon Brown blamed high oil prices for inflation. I wonder how that works, given that they were higher still last summer...? I suspect it's got more to do with a couple of years' worth of high oil prices finally feeding through in second-round effects, along with biofuels and bad weather reducing food production.
They're forecasting a very active hurricane season this year after the dissipation of last yrs El nino conditions (that inhibited hurricane formation) and given the forecast of warm waters. I think we may be in for an interesting summer given the current political, economic and geographical climate.
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I was thinking more along the lines of Katadyn water filters and the like which cost an arm and a leg here.Pete_M wrote:Could it be the right time to import Solar panels from the states? Anyone fancy sharing a container?On a positive note, now is the time to buy cheap stuff from America.
I have no idea how to go about this and I assume that the shipping costs would outweigh the savings but if the dollar keeps dropping it might become possible.
Pete M
Most PV panels aren't made in the USA, surely it'd be cheaper to import them from the source? China/Japan/Malaysia
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http://newsvote.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/6571043.stm
Lenders pull fixed-rate mortgages
Lenders have started to withdraw their fixed-rate mortgage products in preparation for a possible Bank of England (BoE) interest rate rise.
...
Many analysts now believe that a rise in UK interest rates in May is inevitable, with that feeding through into the money market rates, also pushing them higher. This will result in higher costs for lenders and they will pass these on to consumers. "Many lenders are currently offering rates below the money market rate and this cannot go on forever," said Roy Hardy, a mortgage broker at Cobalt Capital.
When you consider the growth in money supply recently, this 'sudden' inflation becomes quite understandable. The price of oil and the Iraq occupation are both fuelling government costs. Don't forget that we also own over $200bn of US debt. Wow, that was a good investment decision...
http://goldnews.bullionvault.com/Pound_money_supply_BoE
http://goldnews.bullionvault.com/Pound_money_supply_BoE
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