|

Bank of England: Slowdown paves way for rate cut

  • We expect the Bank of England to cut the Bank Rate by 25bp to 3.75% in line with market expectations. The MPC is split in half, and we expect a 5-4 vote.
  • Although key data releases ahead of the meeting could change circumstances, we believe a significantly hawkish surprise is needed to put a rate cut in jeopardy.
  • With a divided MPC, we will need more disinflationary signs before we get the final rate cut in April. This will also most likely be reiterated in the guidance.
  • If we are right, we expect slightly weaker GBP on announcement.

We expect the Bank of England (BoE) to cut the Bank Rate to 3.75% on Thursday 18 December, which is also largely priced in by investors. At the November meeting, the MPC decided to keep rates unchanged by a narrow 5-4 vote. Governor Bailey casted the deciding vote for hold with the view: "Rather than cutting Bank Rate now, I would prefer to wait and see if the durability in disinflation is confirmed in upcoming economic developments this year". We believe it has been confirmed.

CPI inflation declined to 3.6% in October in line with BoE projections with service inflation slightly lower than consensus. This was not in itself a low print, but it confirmed that the soft September print was not just a blip. On the labour market, job losses have accelerated in the fall with most recent data, showing a 32K decline in September and October. The unemployment rate increased to 5% and wage growth has been edging lower in September. GDP data for October also disappointed with another 0.1% mom contraction driven by a weak service sector. The economy has not grown since June.

The fiscal stance laid out in the 2026 budget was mildly contractionary with no new inflation headaches from VAT hikes but with modest cuts to energy bills. We think the news since the November meeting will suffice for Governor Bailey to journey into the camp voting for a rate cut, although the labour market report and CPI data released in the days ahead of the meeting is a joker. According to November PMIs it does not look like, these releases will change the dovish picture much. They suggest, price pressures have eased further, and job losses have accelerated.

BoE call. Considering the recent tunes from the most hawkish members of the MPC, we see neither Lombardelli, Pill, Mann or Greene voting for a rate cut any time soon. Parti-cularly not to 3.50%. Thus, rate cuts need to be taken with a slim 5-4 decision. Ramsden, who voted for cut in November, has also stressed the need for gradual cuts to borrowing costs. We think Bailey will take a cautious approach and listen to both sides when timing the next rate cut and that a majority will vote for a final rate cut at the April meeting.

Market reaction. We expect slightly weaker GBP on announcement. More broadly, we stay negative on GBP FX on a relatively weak growth outlook and a positive correlation to a USD negative environment.

Download The Full Bank of England Preview

Author

Danske Research Team

Danske Research Team

Danske Bank A/S

Research is part of Danske Bank Markets and operate as Danske Bank's research department. The department monitors financial markets and economic trends of relevance to Danske Bank Markets and its clients.

More from Danske Research 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 hangs close to 1.1750, with eyes on Fedspeak

EUR/USD is holding its retreat from 10-week highs near 1.1750 in the European session on Friday, capped by a modest rebound in the US Dollar.  The potential downside for the pair might be limited amid expectations of divergent Fed-ECB monetary policy outlooks. Fedspeak is awaited, 

GBP/USD holds steady below 1.3400 after mixed UK data

GBP/USD is keeping its range trade intact below 1.3400 in European trading on Friday. The UK GDP unexpectedly fell by 0.1% in October vs. a 0.1% growth expected, while the Manufacturing Production rose 0.5% over the month in the same period, missing the estimated 1% increase. Mixed UK data have little to no impact on the Pound Sterling. 

Gold extends rally beyond $4,300, fresh high since October 21 amid dovish Fed bets

Gold prolongs its uptrend for the fourth straight day and climbs beyond the $4,300 mark, hitting a fresh high since October 21 during the first half of the European session on Friday. The US Dollar struggles to attract any meaningful buyers and remains close to a two-month low, touched on Thursday, amid the Federal Reserve's dovish outlook.

Litecoin Price Forecast: LTC struggles to extend gains, bullish bets at risk

Litecoin (LTC) price steadies above $80 at press time on Friday, following a reversal from the $87 resistance level on Wednesday. Derivatives data suggests a bullish positional buildup while the LTC futures Open Interest declines, flashing a long squeeze risk.

Big week ends with big doubts

The S&P 500 continued to push higher yesterday as the US 2-year yield wavered around the 3.50% mark following a Federal Reserve (Fed) rate cut earlier this week that was ultimately perceived as not that hawkish after all. The cut is especially boosting the non-tech pockets of the market.

Aave Price Forecast: AAVE primed for breakout as bullish signals strengthen

Aave (AAVE) price is trading above $204 at the time of writing on Friday and approaching the upper boundary of its descending parallel channel; a breakout from this structure would favor the bulls.