The markets have spoken, and for once, they are not shouting. Sterling rose this morning against a basket of major currencies after the latest inflation figures came in line with expectations, defying the doom-mongers who had predicted a fresh spike in consumer prices. The annual CPI rate held at 2.2 per cent, unchanged from the previous month, while core inflation edged down to 3.4 per cent. This is hardly a triumph, but in the current climate, steady is the new spectacular.
The pound’s modest rally, up 0.6 per cent against the dollar to $1.2845, reflects a welcome if fragile vote of confidence in the UK’s fiscal management. After weeks of jitters over public borrowing and the Bank of England’s delicate dance between tightening and recession avoidance, this data suggests the patient is not yet flatlining. But let’s not pop the Champagne just yet. The 2.2 per cent figure is still above the MPC’s 2 per cent target, and services inflation remains sticky at 5.1 per cent. The battle is not won; it has merely reached a ceasefire.
What this means for the gilts market is equally nuanced. The yield on the 10-year gilt held steady at 4.15 per cent, indicating that bond vigilantes are content to watch and wait. The Chancellor’s recent spending commitments, particularly the public sector pay rises, have not yet triggered a full-blown gilt tantrum, but the queue of debt sales ahead could test that patience. If inflation prints surprise on the upside in the autumn, the market will demand a risk premium, and that will feed through to higher mortgage rates and a tighter squeeze on households.
The real story here, however, is the preservation of economic sovereignty. In a week where the eurozone wobbled on German industrial data and the yen continues its slide against the dollar, the UK’s relative stability is a rare commodity. Capital flight? Not today. Foreign investors still see London as a safe harbour, despite the political noise. The yield spread between UK gilts and German Bunds remains narrow, suggesting that the market is not pricing in any imminent collapse of fiscal discipline.
But make no mistake: this is a fragile equilibrium. The economy is walking a tightrope between stagnating growth and lingering inflation. The Bank of England will be watching the inflation data closely for any signs of a renewed uptick, particularly in the services sector, which is more sensitive to wage pressures. If the MPC is forced to hold rates at 5.25 per cent for longer, the risk of recession will increase, and the pound’s recent gains could evaporate.
The bottom line: Britain’s economic sovereignty is intact today, but it is not guaranteed. The market has given the government a reprieve, not a pardon. The Chancellor must now use this window to demonstrate fiscal rectitude, or the next inflation report could write a very different headline.








