|

Bank of England set to cut rates in August after June pause

Despite weaker jobs numbers, the Bank of England is showing little sign that it’s about to pick up the pace of easing. We expect cuts in August and November. EUR/GBP upside risks are set to persist in the short and medium term.

Macro background more favourable for cuts

The Bank of England has kept rates on hold at 4.25% and, more importantly, has offered little indication that the recent batch of worrisome labour market data warrants a faster pace of easing. Taken at face value, the latest payrolls data showed the fastest monthly fall in employment outside of the pandemic since records for the figures began in 2014 – and these have now fallen in 9 out of the past 10 months. They do, however, have a tendency of being revised up, and for now, officials aren’t sounding the alarm bells on a more serious uptick in unemployment. Policymakers are not helped by the fact that several of the major data releases – including the unemployment rate, GDP and inflation – have all recently been subject to data quality issues or excessive volatility. The consensus at the Bank is, understandably, to wait for more information.

But we think the backdrop is becoming more favourable. Services inflation is likely to come under further downward pressure over the coming months, while wage growth is undershooting the Bank’s May forecasts. Given how far the jobs market has cooled (and continues to), we suspect wage growth will come materially lower by the end of this year.

Two more cuts in 2025

Does that mean faster rate cuts? For now, we think it’s unlikely. Yes, three out of nine officials voted for an immediate rate cut this time. Investors may well take that as a hint that the tide is turning on the committee. But past experience has shown that the vote split contains few useful signals. December’s meeting saw a similar 6-3 vote, yet heralded little change in the Bank’s overall stance.

The hawks, meanwhile, will also have a beady eye on oil prices. Though the rise so far won't make much difference to the inflation outlook – and officials commented that it had little bearing on this latest decision – we know some at the Bank are wary of a repeat of 2022, where a rise in energy prices turned into a much wider and more persistent services-driven inflation episode.

The wider circumstances today look very different, though. For one thing, the labour market is much looser today than it was back then, offering less scope for workers to recoup disposable income lost to higher oil prices. That said, a much more serious spike in oil prices is the most obvious hawkish risk for the UK rate outlook right now. That aside, our base case is that the BoE cuts rates in August and November, and twice more in 2026.

EUR/GBP balance of risks still tilted to the upside

The pound’s reaction to the BoE announcement was very muted, as the vote split seemed to merely endorse markets' well-established expectations for a cut in August.

We retain a short-term target in EUR/GBP at 0.860. Geopolitical risks and a potential return of trade-induced market volatility in July argue that the balance of risks remains tilted to the upside for the pair despite the recent rally.

There is also a non-negligible possibility that another batch of soft UK data can prompt markets to speculate on an acceleration in BoE rate cuts. When adding the additional risks to UK growth, the jobs market and the prospect of fiscal tightening, we think the pound can underperform most G10 currencies in the second half of 2025, with EUR/GBP breaking above 0.870.

Read the original analysis: Bank of England set to cut rates in August after June pause

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:

Markets move fast. We move first.

Orange Juice Newsletter brings you expert driven insights - not headlines. Every day on your inbox.

By subscribing you agree to our Terms and conditions.

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD moves sideways below 1.1800 on Christmas Eve

EUR/USD struggles to find direction and trades in a narrow channel below 1.1800 after posting gains for two consecutive days. Bond and stock markets in the US will open at the usual time and close early on Christmas Eve, allowing the trading action to remain subdued. 

GBP/USD keeps range around 1.3500 amid quiet markets

GBP/USD keeps its range trade intact at around 1.3500 on Wednesday. The Pound Sterling holds the upper hand over the US Dollar amid pre-Christmas light trading as traders move to the sidelines heading into the holiday season. 

Gold retreats from record highs, trades below $4,500

Gold retreats after setting a new record-high above $4,520 earlier in the day and trades in a tight range below $4,500 as trading volumes thin out ahead of the Christmas break. The US Dollar selling bias remains unabated on the back of dovish Fed expectations, which continues to act as a tailwind for the bullion amid persistent geopolitical risks.

Bitcoin slips below $87,000 as ETF outflows intensify, whale participation declines

Bitcoin price continues to trade around $86,770 on Wednesday, after failing to break above the $90,000 resistance. US-listed spot ETFs record an outflow of $188.64 million on Tuesday, marking the fourth consecutive day of withdrawals.

Economic outlook 2026-2027 in advanced countries: Solidity test

After a year marked by global economic resilience and ending on a note of optimism, 2026 looks promising and could be a year of solid economic performance. In our baseline scenario, we expect most of the supportive factors at work in 2025 to continue to play a role in 2026.

Avalanche struggles near $12 as Grayscale files updated form for ETF

Avalanche trades close to $12 by press time on Wednesday, extending the nearly 2% drop from the previous day. Grayscale filed an updated form to convert its Avalanche-focused Trust into an ETF with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.