Newsflash: The Bank of England has voted to leave UK interest rates on hold.
In a decision widely expected by economists, the BoE is maintaining Bank rate at 3.75%.
The decision is not unanimous, though – two policymakers wanted to hike interest rates to 4%,. were outvoted by the other seven who voted to hold rates.
Announcing the decision, the Bank says:
double quotation mark Global energy prices have fallen since the previous meeting in response to events in the Middle East. But they remain higher than pre-conflict and have continued to be volatile.
The impact of the energy shock on the UK economy remains uncertain. Monetary policy cannot influence energy prices. is being set to ensure that the economic adjustment to them occurs in a way that achieves the 2% inflation target sustainably.
The policy stance required to achieve this will depend on the scale. duration of the shock, and how it propagates through the economy.
The Bank of England had cut rates six times since mid-2024. was expected to continue doing so, before Trump’s Operation Epic Fury led to Iran choking off oil supplies from the Gulf.
City lobby groups are being incredibly cautious in responding to Tory leader Kemi Badenoch’s proposals to eradicate bank ringfencing. the Financial Ombudsman Service (FOS) ( see earlier post ).
There seem to be a few factors at play. including the fact that not all of their members are going to be on board (read: Barclays’ opposition to changing ringfencing rules ).
Scrapping the FOS could also prove politically sensitive. there is also no guarantee that its replacement would be swiftly introduced and efficiently implemented.
There’s also a matter of how much a FOS replacement and reversing ringfencing might cost firms in the end.
In a statement, TheCityUK’s CEO Miles Celic was careful not to take sides, saying:
double quotation mark “The Leader of the Opposition’s speech is an important contribution to the debate on how financial services can best support growth across the UK.
There is a clear need to ensure our tax and regulatory framework is competitive, proportionate and predictable. This has to be built on the high standards that underpin trust in the UK markets.”
Likewise, UK Finance said:
double quotation mark “Financial services are vitally important to the UK economy,. we welcome engagement on how to get the best from the sector and enhance UK competitiveness.
Ensuring reforms are delivered, from enabling responsible risk‑taking to reform of bank capital requirements, will help the sector support investment. growth across the wider economy, as set out in our recent Plan for Growth: From Strategy to Delivery report.”
Meanwhile in the US, there appears to have been a small drop in the number of people being laid off.
The number of new initial claims for unemployment support fell by 4,000 last week to 226,000. indicating American workers continued to hold onto staff.
Reaction to today’s UK interest rate decision is pouring in.
ING’s James Smith predicts the next move in UK interest rates will be downwards, next year:
double quotation mark There’s nothing in today’s decision. changes our mind that the next move is likely to be a rate cut in 2027. It feels like it would take a lot for the five more neutral-to-dovish members of the nine-strong committee to vote for a hike, barring the Iran deal falling apart. energy prices moving materially higher
Ruth Gregory, deputy chief UK economist at Capital Economics, says the Bank of England is talking “a good hawkish game” – with two votes to raise interest rates –. is unlikely to deliver.
double quotation mark The last thing the MPC wants to do is unwind some of the tightening in financial conditions priced into the markets. And while there are important differences with the energy shock in 2022. the Bank won’t want to make the same mistake as then, when it was widely criticised for keeping policy too loose for too long.
The key point is that the hawkishness of Pill. Greene does not seem to have been replicated amongst the four “centrists” (Lombardelli, Bailey, Breeden and Ramsden). This suggests there hasn’t been a material shift in the Bank’s “reaction function”. And it means the hawks probably won’t have the five votes required for a rate hike soon.
David Muir. senior economist at Moody’s Analytics, suggests the Bank could avoid raising interest rates this year, unless the US-Iran peace deal falters:
double quotation mark With demand subdued, labour market conditions weak,. the outlook for energy prices less concerning, a rate hold was no surprise at June’s Monetary Policy Committee meeting. The decline in energy prices following the U.S.-Iran agreement gives us greater confidence that the Bank of England will avoid a rate hike in the second half of the year. instead address the energy-driven rise in inflation through a prolonged pause. But an unravelling of the deal would raise the risk of a precautionary hike aimed at anchoring inflation expectations. containing second-round effects on prices and wages.
The pound has fallen to its lowest level against the US dollar in over two months. after the Bank of England left interest rates on hold today.
Sterling is down 0.8 of a cent, or -0.6%, to $1.3207 against the dollar, the lowest since 6 April.
That suggests the City sees today’s decision as somewhat dovish. with the bank also lowering its forecasts for inflation by the end of the year ( see earlier post ).
However, the money markets are still pricing in one interest rate hike by the end of the year.
Daniela Hathorn, senior market analyst at capital.com, says:
double quotation mark Despite the hawkish undertones of the BoE statement, sterling weakened sharply against the dollar, the euro,. the yen following the decision. The move suggests markets focused less on the 7-2 vote split. more on the Bank’s decision to lower its inflation outlook and acknowledge progress on disinflation.
However, the decline in GBP does not necessarily reflect a dovish repricing of UK rates.
Indeed, markets continue to price in the possibility of a rate hike by year-end, supported by the dissenting votes from Greene. Pill, the MPC’s emphasis on second-round inflation risks, and Bailey’s warning that higher energy prices could still feed through into broader price pressures.
Policymakers Huw Pill. Megan Greene have both insisted that it would have been better to raise UK interest rates today, rather than hold them.
BoE chief economist Pill warns. “upside risks” to hitting the Bank’s 2% inflation target have increased in recent months due to war in the Middle East.
He explains that he continues to favour “prompt but modest action” on interest rates now. saying:
double quotation mark Recognising the significant uncertainty that surrounds the UK inflation outlook. raising Bank Rate to 4% continues to be the most robust monetary policy response to the intensification of these risks.
Greene. who joined with Pill in voting for a rate rise today, argues that the Bank should be pursuing a “risk management strategy”, of raising rates now in case the ‘second-round effects’ from the energy shock (ie, a wage-price spiral) are stronger than the Bank predicts.
She argues that higher interest rates would cool households’ and firms’ inflation expectations, saying:
double quotation mark Hiking Bank Rate assuming greater second-round effects, then discovering they were smaller. course-correcting results in a very moderately lower output gap and inflation returns to target at the end of the forecast period.
These risks are asymmetric. so we should insure against the possibility of larger second-round effects until we have evidence to determine they are not materialising. A proactive hike now in Bank Rate should help anchor inflation expectations.
The Bank of England’s governor, Andrew Bailey, has explained that he is content to hold interest rates today –. would respond ‘promptly’ if there were signs that high energy cost were driving up prices in the shops, or wages.
Bailey uses the MPC members’ views section of today’s minutes to lay out his thinking, saying:
double quotation mark There has been a marked fall in energy prices in recent days, reflecting progress on talks involving US. Iran. But the situation remains unpredictable, and there is clearly a risk that energy prices remain elevated for an extended duration. Recent inflation outturns give greater confidence that gradual underlying disinflation has continued. Labour market data show some further softening, and there are further signs of demand weakness.
Our remit recognises that attempting to bring inflation back to the target too quickly may cause undesirable volatility in output.
Given the context at present of softness in the real economy. uncertainty around the scale and duration of the shock to energy prices, tolerating temporarily above-target inflation as part of a return to target is an appropriate way to approach the trade-off, providing inflation expectations remain contained. I am content at the present time with holding, while accepting that risks to inflation. interest rates are on the upside, as reflected in the upward slope in the sterling yield curve, which appears to be accounted for more by risk premia than expected rates. I would respond promptly to any signals. an extended period of elevated energy prices could be leading to stronger possible second-round effects.
The Bank of England has trimmed its forecast for how fast UK inflation will rise this year.
The BoE now predicts that CPI inflation – which was 2.8% last month – is now expected to be a little under 3% in the third quarter of this year,. “pick up to a little over 3.25% in Q4”.
That’s a downgrade compared with April; two months ago, the Bank forecast inflation would hit 3.3% in Q3,. “rise somewhat further in Q4.”.
Announcing today’s interest rate decision, the Bank of England says that the conflict in the Middle East,. its impact on energy prices and the UK economy, remained the “dominant source of uncertainty for the inflation outlook”.
The minutes of this week’s meeting say:
double quotation mark As had been outlined in the April Monetary Policy Report. Minutes, monetary policy could not influence global energy prices. And it would take time for monetary policy to work through the economy. so any action the MPC might take would not prevent higher inflation in coming months. What the MPC would do is set monetary policy to make sure that the effects of the shock did not become embedded into broad-based inflationary pressures, so that inflation fell back to the 2% target. stayed there.
Bank of England chief economists Huw Pill again voted to raise interest rates. as he also did at the last meeting (and was outvoted then too).
But this time he had company – external MPC member Megan Greene also voted to increase rates to 4%.
Newsflash: The Bank of England has voted to leave UK interest rates on hold.
In a decision widely expected by economists, the BoE is maintaining Bank rate at 3.75%.
The decision is not unanimous, though – two policymakers wanted to hike interest rates to 4%,. were outvoted by the other seven who voted to hold rates.
Announcing the decision, the Bank says:
double quotation mark Global energy prices have fallen since the previous meeting in response to events in the Middle East. But they remain higher than pre-conflict and have continued to be volatile.
The impact of the energy shock on the UK economy remains uncertain. Monetary policy cannot influence energy prices. is being set to ensure that the economic adjustment to them occurs in a way that achieves the 2% inflation target sustainably.
The policy stance required to achieve this will depend on the scale. duration of the shock, and how it propagates through the economy.
The Bank of England had cut rates six times since mid-2024. was expected to continue doing so, before Trump’s Operation Epic Fury led to Iran choking off oil supplies from the Gulf.
The BoE’s MPC will almost certainly keep interest rates on hold today,. probably in July as well, reports Professor Costas Milas, of the University of Liverpool’s Management School.
double quotation mark First, as Dr Papapanagiotou. I show in a brand new blog published today for LSE Business Review, a model which takes into account UK economic policy uncertainty (EPU) in addition to output growth and inflation developments (Chart 3 in the blog) is quite impressive at forecasting BoE’s policy rate. EPU is currently elevated, not least because of today’s by-election, and this will put off MPC members for hiking.
Second,. as we discuss in the LSE Business Review blog, the BoE has been looking at interest rate rises in three different scenarios, depending on oil prices hitting $108 or $130 per barrel. Following the 60-day “deal” between the US and Iran, oil currently trades at less than $75 currently. All in all, my expectation is that the MPC will hold both today and on July the 30th!
Britain’s stock market is in the red ahead of the Bank of England’s interest rate decision. due in 15 minutes time.
The FTSE 100 share index is down 107 points, or just over 1%, at 10,401 points. That follows losses on Wall Street last night, after the US Federal Reserve was more hawkish than expected.
Other European markets are faring better, with Germany’s DAX and France’s CAC both up over 0.1%.
The US dollar has climbed to its highest level in over a year. after America’s central bank indicated it could raise interest rates later this year.
Half the policymakers at the Federal Reserve predicted there would be at least one increase in US interest rates this year. The Fed also left rates on hold last night, as expected.
This has pushed the dollar index up to its highest level since May 2025.
Discussion
Sign in to join the thread, react, and share images.