May 20 (Reuters) - British government bond yields fell on Wednesday after weaker-than-expected inflation data curbed bets on Bank of England interest rate hikes this year.
Yields fell around 5-7 basis points on the day across the range of maturities, with the interest rate-sensitive two-year gilts showing the sharpest fall, down about 8 basis points to 4.43%.
Earlier on Wednesday the Office for National Statistics said consumer price inflation cooled to 2.8% in April from 3.3% in March.
Although the slowdown is likely to mark only a temporary lull caused in part by a fall in regulated energy costs that will reverse later this year, it eased some pressure on the BoE to act urgently against the inflationary impact of the Iran war.
"We push back our call for a June BoE hike to July," said J.P. Morgan economist Allan Monks.
"Taken with yesterday's weaker labour market report, the incoming data are softer than the BoE expected and buy it more time before potentially delivering higher rates," Monks said.
Yields on medium and longer-dated gilts have hit their highest levels in decades in recent sessions as worries about a possible change in political leadership in Britain combined with the inflationary hit from the Iran war.
Rate futures pointed to around 52 basis points of BoE policy tightening by December - representing full pricing of two quarter-point rate hikes - down from about 60 bps on Tuesday. (Reporting by Andy Bruce Editing by William Schomberg)
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