UK Inflation: What to Expect from May’s Data

UK inflation figures will be more closely watched than usual on Wednesday as the Office for National Statistics releases CPI data from May.

According to FactSet consensus figures, inflation is expected to have hit the official 2% target last month, from 2.3% in April. This would be the first time that the rate of inflation has been at this level since July 2021, and follows a three-year period that saw CPI hit 11.1% before falling back.

This data release is also significant because it’s the last inflation data before the general election on July 4. The Conservative party is campaigning on this issue, claiming credit for bringing inflation back to target.

If inflation does fall back to 2%, this will pile pressure on the Bank of England to cut rates from their current level of 5.25%. While this looks unlikely at the June 20 meeting, it can’t be ruled out completely.

Still, the fall in inflation back to 2% will be gratifying for the Bank, which hiked rates from 0.1% in December 2021 to 5.25% by August 2023, as it shows that drastic monetary tightening worked, eventually. In this period central banks slammed on the brakes to tackle a surge in inflation that hadn’t been seen for decades.

As we reach the half-way stage of 2024, inflation is proving persistent in the US and eurozone. The European Central Bank recently raised its inflation forecasts for this year, while the Federal Reserve has just adjusted its forecasts for core inflation higher for the end of this year.

Prices Aren’t Falling, They’re Just Rising Less Quickly

In the UK, April CPI came in at 2.3%, rather than the forecast 2.1%, which illustrates the uneven path back to target. Services inflation was still at 5.9% in April, and this is an area of concern for the Bank of England as it considers interest rate cuts.

In April, weaker energy prices drove the fall in inflation from 2.6% to 2.3%.

Rises in food and drink prices are easing from 2023 levels, but basic foodstuffs are significantly higher than before the global inflation surge.

Core CPI, which excludes more volatile energy and food prices, fell to 3.9% in April, from 4.2% in March. FactSet consensus has UK core CPI dropping to 3.5% in May. Policymakers are more concerned about core CPI because it’s falling more slowly than the headline rate of inflation and is also higher

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Europe’s mutual funds continue to bleed heavily

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Europe’s active asset managers face an unprecedented challenge in dealing with continued mutual fund outflows.

Investors have pulled €258bn from actively managed equity funds since the start of 2022, with a further €140bn withdrawn from multi-asset and alternative funds, Morningstar data shows.

However, passive product providers have prospered from investor demand, with inflows to index and exchange traded equity funds totalling €256bn.

Passive bond funds garnered €174bn over the same period.

This article was previously published by Ignites Europe, a title owned by the FT Group.

Asset managers have never before had to face such a prolonged period of redemptions from European mutual funds.

Prior periods of outflows have tended to be restricted to relatively short periods, even if the withdrawals have been large, such as in 2008, 2011 and 2018.

By contrast, aggregate net outflows from active funds are continuing well into their third year in 2024.

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Bond funds are a brighter spot for active managers, gathering net inflows in both 2023 and the early months of 2024.

Passive funds have enjoyed aggregate net inflows in each of the five years in this analysis, totalling €828bn across equity and bond funds. Even in years when active funds have attracted inflows, clients have still been net contributors to passives.

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Prior to 2022, active equity funds attracted net inflows in both 2020 and 2021, totalling €239bn in the latter year. But these products then faced outflows of around €100bn in both 2022 and 2023.

By contrast, active fixed income funds shook off the outflows they experienced in 2022, with demand rising to €73bn of inflows in 2023 and then €89bn over the first four months of 2024 — outstripping all passive funds.

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One feature of European fund inflows before 2022 was the demand for sustainable products. Sustainable equity funds had inflows of €256bn in 2021 alone.

This

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