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UK Inflation Expected to Hit 4% - Double the Target and Killing Rate Cut Hopes

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Published Oct 22, 2025
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Summary:
  • UK inflation is expected to hit 4% in September - the highest among major rich economies and double the Bank of England's 2% target
  • Markets currently price just a 15% chance of a November rate cut, and a hotter-than-expected inflation print would kill those odds completely
  • The persistent inflation adds pressure on finance minister Rachel Reeves, who pledged to ease cost-of-living pressures and boost economic growth

The Inflation Problem

UK inflation data drops Wednesday, and expectations aren't good.

Economists predict the inflation rate rose to 4% in September. That's: • Double the Bank of England's 2% target • The highest among major developed economies • Bad news for anyone hoping for rate cuts

Markets currently price a nearly 15% chance the Bank of England cuts rates by 25 basis points at its November meeting. That's already slim odds.

An upside surprise - inflation coming in hotter than 4% - would "almost certainly" wipe out those bets completely.

Why This Matters

High inflation keeps life expensive for UK households.

It also keeps borrowing costs elevated. Mortgages, business loans, credit cards - all stay more expensive when rates remain high.

The Bank of England is caught in a tough spot. Policymakers are divided:

Some want aggressive cuts to offset the slowing job market

Others worry about persistent inflation pressure

The majority favors gradual rate cuts

That internal divide makes policy unpredictable. And 4% inflation makes the hawks' case much stronger.

Political Pressure

Finance Minister Rachel Reeves has a problem.

She pledged to: • Ease cost-of-living pressures • Speed economic growth

High inflation makes both goals harder. You can't ease cost-of-living pressures when prices keep rising 4% annually. And high borrowing costs constrain business investment and consumer spending, slowing growth.

Reeves needs inflation to cool so the Bank of England can cut rates. But the data isn't cooperating.

The Rate Cut Outlook

Forget November. The bigger question is year-end.

Even if the Bank of England doesn't cut in November, markets had been pricing in potential cuts later in 2025. A hot inflation print clouds that entire outlook.

If inflation stays elevated, rate cuts get pushed further into the future. That keeps pressure on households and businesses dealing with high borrowing costs.

Gold's Sudden Plunge

Meanwhile, gold markets are reeling from a dramatic selloff.

The metal's "blistering rally" came to a sudden halt with no obvious trigger. Gold had been surging to record highs before the recent crash.

We covered this earlier - gold dropped as much as 6.3% Tuesday in its worst rout in over 12 years. Wednesday saw more losses despite the metal still being up about 55% for the year.

Asian Markets React

Asian shares retreated Wednesday following gold's selloff.

One bright spot: Japan's Nikkei reversed early losses to trade higher after reports that new Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi is preparing an economic stimulus package.

The package is likely to exceed last year's 13.9 trillion yen ($92 billion) to help households tackle inflation.

Global money managers are showing renewed interest in Japanese stocks and bonds, attracted by: • The new government's reflationist policies • Desire to diversify from pricier U.S. and European markets

The Bottom Line

The UK's inflation problem isn't going away.

At 4% - double the target - the Bank of England has little room to cut rates even with a slowing job market. That creates a painful squeeze: • Workers facing a weakening labor market • Households dealing with high costs • Businesses struggling with expensive borrowing

For investors, UK assets become less attractive when: • Inflation stays elevated • Rate cut expectations evaporate • Economic growth remains constrained

The Wednesday data release could be a turning point. If inflation comes in at or below 4%, there's still a slim chance for year-end cuts. If it comes in hotter, rate cuts likely disappear from the near-term picture entirely.

Finance Minister Reeves is learning what many politicians discover: You can make promises about easing cost-of-living pressures, but you can't control inflation directly. That's the central bank's job. And right now, they're failing at it.

The 4% inflation rate tells the story. UK price growth is running twice as hot as the target and higher than peer economies. Until that changes, households stay squeezed and the economy stays constrained.

Rate cut hopes? Wednesday's data will likely bury them.

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