|

Bank of England inches one step closer to a summer rate cut

The Bank of England is undoubtedly turning more optimistic, but it’s keeping its options open amid some uncertainty surrounding the near-term inflation numbers. We still narrowly expect the first rate cut in August.

The Bank of England has kept rates on hold, but that's soon to change

The Bank of England is getting very close to its first rate cut. That much is clear from the latest policy statement which, while keeping rates on hold at 5.25%, has a distinctly more optimistic flair. It echoes recent comments from Governor Andrew Bailey, who has been hammering home the message that the UK’s inflation outlook is quite different to the US.

What this statement doesn’t do, however, is come down clearly in favour of a rate cut at the next meeting in June. The key yardstick was whether the Bank changed its forward guidance, and despite that more dovish spin elsewhere, those crucial sentences remained unchanged. The BoE is still telling us that rates need to stay restrictive for an extended period of time.

Admittedly officials have been clear that this statement can still be the case after the first few rate cuts. That’s unquestionably true, but words matter – and we think we’d have seen a more wholesale rewrite of those sentences if the Bank was trying to bake in expectations for a June move.

That’s not to say it can’t happen. Bailey has just said in a news conference that a June rate cut is 'neither ruled out, nor fait accompli'. We’ll get two more inflation readings between now and then, which have the potential to be quite volatile. April is the month when much of the service-sector basket is subject to annual price hikes, and experience from this time last year shows this can be unpredictable. Understandably the Bank isn’t wanting to second guess those services CPI figures, which we think could come in slightly higher than the Bank is forecasting in the very near-term.

We’re still leaning slightly more towards an August start date for rate cuts, though it’s a close call. What isn’t in doubt, is that the Bank is comfortable with moving ahead of the Fed. A look at the new forecasts shows the all-important inflation projection for two years’ time bang on 2%. That forecast is premised on market rate expectations, and what that tells us – at least implicitly – is that the Bank isn’t uncomfortable with current market pricing for two rate cuts this year.

Sterling slightly weaker as extra voter opts for rate cut

Markets have reacted with a small move lower in short-dated rates, and perhaps that’s because we saw an extra voter – Dave Ramsden – join Swati Dhingra in voting for an immediate cut. Most economists, ourselves included, thought we’d get another 8-1 vote to keep rates on hold. Though in truth, given Ramsden recently said he thought the risks on inflation were tilted towards the downside, that’s maybe not too surprising. And as we noted in our preview, we shouldn’t read too much into the vote split anyway.

History has shown us that the five internal committee members (of which Ramsden is one) tend to move as a pack. And indeed, it's extremely rare to see one of their number dissenting from the overall decision. In other words, it would be a mistake to look at the 7-2 vote today and conclude that it can’t flip to a comfortable majority in favour of a cut at either the June or August meeting.

The bottom line: the Bank is inching towards a rate cut but it is keeping its options open. The June vs August debate will be largely resolved when we get those April inflation figures in a couple of weeks' time. For now, we’re sticking with August as our base case.

Read the original analysis: Bank of England inches one step closer to a summer rate cut

Author

ING Global Economics Team

ING Global Economics Team

ING Economic and Financial Analysis

From Trump to trade, FX to Brexit, ING’s global economists have it covered. Go to ING.com/THINK to stay a step ahead.

More from ING Global Economics Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD gathers traction, approaches 1.1800

EUR/USD manages to reverse Tuesday’s pullback, advancing to two-day highs near the 1.1800 hurdle in the latter part of Wednesday’s session. The pair’s decent uptick comes on the back of the modest retracement in the US Dollar, as investors continue to closely follow developments on the trade front and news from the White House in the wake of President Trump’s SOTU speech.

GBP/USD challenges multi-day highs near 1.3530

GBP/USD leaves behind the previous day’s decline and regains fresh upside traction on Wednesday, surpassing the 1.3500 barrier in a context of a modest decline in the Greenback and a generalised improved mood in the risk-linked space. Meanwhile, the US tariff narrative continues to dictate the mood among market participants after Presidet Trump’s SOTU speech failed to surprise markets.

Gold remains bid and close to $5,200

Gold buyers are returning to the fold on Wednesday, targeting the $5,200 area and possibly beyond, after Tuesday’s corrective dip from monthly highs. The rebound in the precious metal comes as the US Dollar loses traction, with Trump’s SOTU speech offering little fresh direction and AI-related nerves continuing to ease.

Crypto Today: Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP test rebound strength as ETF inflows return

Bitcoin, Ethereum and Ripple are gaining traction at the time of writing on Wednesday, amid persistent market doldrums. The Crypto King is up over 2% intraday, trading above $65,000 from the day’s opening of $64,058.

Nvidia earnings to influence AI trade and broader market sentiment

For the last three years, Nvidia has been the engine of the AI boom, and now Wall Street is watching to see whether that momentum can keep going. High-growth stocks have been struggling to maintain their bullish trend in 2026.

Cosmos Hub Price Forecast: ATOM rebounds slightly, bearish outlook remains intact

Cosmos Hub (ATOM) price rebounds, trading above $2.05 at the time of writing on Wednesday, after undergoing a sharp correction since last week. Weakening on-chain and derivatives data support a bearish outlook, while technical analysis remains unfavorable.