Interest-rate rises mean more pain for stocks

Interest rates are rising around the world as central banks try to get inflation under control. That’s hitting stockmarkets – and there is more pain to come.

Jerome Powell
Powell: fighting inflation is the Fed's priority
(Image credit: © Win McNamee/Getty Images)

The position of central bankers today “recalls an old joke about a cab driver telling a lost tourist asking for directions: If I were you, I would not be starting from here”, says John Plender in the Financial Times. The Bank of England has warned that inflation will top 10% later this year while issuing gloomy growth forecasts. As central banks “try to engineer a soft landing” the risk of a “policy error” that crashes the economy is high.

“The Bank of England is skirting around the ‘r’ word but its grim set of growth forecasts all but confirm that the UK is heading for a recession next year,” says Mehreen Khan in The Times. Policymakers last week raised interest rates by 0.25 percentage points to 1%, the highest level since February 2009. Three of the nine members of the monetary policy committee wanted to go further and voted for a 0.5% rise. Markets now expect UK interest rates to keep rising until they hit 2.5% next year.

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Markets editor

Alex is an investment writer who has been contributing to MoneyWeek since 2015. He has been the magazine’s markets editor since 2019. 

Alex has a passion for demystifying the often arcane world of finance for a general readership. While financial media tends to focus compulsively on the latest trend, the best opportunities can lie forgotten elsewhere. 

He is especially interested in European equities – where his fluent French helps him to cover the continent’s largest bourse – and emerging markets, where his experience living in Beijing, and conversational Chinese, prove useful. 

Hailing from Leeds, he studied Philosophy, Politics and Economics at the University of Oxford. He also holds a Master of Public Health from the University of Manchester.