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Analysis

Bank of England joins central bank rate cut club

Summary

  • The Bank of England (BoE) joined the growing group of G10 central banks that have eased monetary policy, by delivering an initial 25 bps policy rate cut to 5.00% at today's monetary policy announcement. The guidance from the BoE's announcement was also somewhat cautious, for now likely arguing against a steady series of rate cuts at each and every meeting.

  • That message was reinforced by the central bank's updated economic projections, which envisage stronger GDP growth of 1.2% in 2024 and also see headline CPI inflation rebounding to 2.7% by the end of this year. Based on market-implied interest rates, however, inflation is expected to undershoot the 2% inflation target over the medium term.

  • Overall, we view today's announcement as consistent with our view the Bank of England will take an initially cautious approach to monetary easing. We forecast only one more policy rate cut this year, of 25 bps at the November monetary policy announcement. We expect somewhat faster easing in 2025, and forecast a cumulative 125 bps of rate cuts next year which would see the policy rate end 2025 at 3.50%.

Bank of England delivers rate cut, offers careful guidance

The Bank of England (BoE) joined the growing group of G10 central banks that have eased monetary policy, by delivering an initial 25 bps policy rate cut to 5.00% at today's monetary policy announcement. To be sure, the decision was finely balanced, with a closely split 5-4 vote from policymakers to lower interest rates. The guidance from the BoE's announcement was also somewhat cautious, for now likely arguing against a steady series of rate cuts at each and every meeting.

To be sure, there was some softening in the BoE's assessment of the outlook for underlying inflation, comments that broadly justified the decision to lower interest rates. The central bank said it:

“expects the fall in headline inflation, and normalization in many indicators of inflation expectations, to continue to feed through to weaker pay and price-setting dynamics. A margin of slack should emerge in the economy as GDP falls below potential and the labor market eases further. Domestic inflationary persistence is expected to fade away over the next few years, owing to the restrictive stance of monetary policy.”

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