UK inflation projected to hit 18.6% as gas prices
surge
Bank raises forecast as European gas price sets new
record
Citigroup predicts the energy price cap will rise to
£4,567 in January and £5,816 in April, compared with today’s £1,971 per annum
Chris
Giles, David Sheppard and Jim Pickard in London YESTERDAY
https://www.ft.com/content/778e65e1-6ec5-4fd7-98d5-9d701eb29567
Surging
wholesale gas prices are putting the UK on a path to exceed 18 per cent
inflation next year, the highest rate among larger western economies, according
to a report from Citigroup.
The bank’s
projection heaps more pressure on candidates for the Conservative leadership to
address a worsening cost of living crisis and came as UK gas prices for
next-day delivery surged as much as 33 per cent.
Rapidly
increasing prices for natural gas have left economic projections out of date.
At the start of the month, the Bank of England forecast that higher gas prices
would push inflation above 13 per cent towards the end of this year.
Bank of
America said last week that it expected UK consumer price inflation to peak at
14 per cent in January, while Goldman Sachs and EY projected it to hit 15 per
cent.
But with
Europe’s gas crisis escalating in August, Citi predicted on Monday that
inflation would reach 18.6 per cent in January.
Continental
European gas prices are more than 14 times their average of the past decade.
The benchmark European gas price rallied almost 10 per cent on Monday to €278
per megawatt hour ($81 per million British thermal units), the highest closing
price on record and taking the rise over August to 45 per cent.
Examining
the wholesale figures, Citi predicted that the UK’s retail energy price cap —
which limits how much households pay for heating and electricity — would be
raised to £4,567 in January and then £5,816 in April, compared with the current
level of £1,971 a year. It added that the shifts would lead to inflation
“entering the stratosphere”.
The bank’s
projected rate would be higher than the peak of inflation after the second Opec
oil shock of 1979 when CPI reached 17.8 per cent, according to estimates from
the Office for National Statistics.
The rate of
inflation has exceeded expectations in most months of this year as price rises
have spread through the economy. The ONS said it stood at 10.1 per cent in
July, the highest level in more than 40 years and the highest among G7
countries.
The energy
regulator Ofgem will announce on Friday the energy price cap for
October-January, which most analysts expect to rise to more than £3,500 for a
household with average usage of energy — an increase of 75 per cent on current
levels.
The
imminent rise will put pressure on Tory leadership candidates Rishi Sunak and
Liz Truss to be specific in the help they propose for households. The Labour
party has called for bills to be frozen and for the state to absorb the cost.
The
government has said that energy policy was a matter for the new prime minister,
but Number 10 has sought to reassure the public that the UK will not run short
of gas this winter.
A Downing
Street spokesperson urged people not to panic over energy supplies despite
concerns about potential blackouts in the coming months and said households did
not need to cut back their usage.
“Households,
businesses and industry can be confident they will get the gas and electricity
they need over the winter,” she said. “That’s because we have one of the most
diverse and reliable energy systems in the world, unlike other countries in
Europe we are not dependent on Russian supplies and have access to our own
North Sea gas reserves.”

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