|

BoE: Gradual quarterly cuts remain our base case

  • At today's monetary policy meeting the BoE cut the Bank Rate by 25bp to 4.50%, as was widely expected.

  • In line with our view, the BoE delivered a dovish twist to its guidance with a dovish vote split, which triggered the immediate market reaction. Yet the statement and press conference revealed that BoE still favours a "gradual" and "careful" approach to easing monetary policy.

  • Gilt yields tracked lower and EUR/GBP moved higher on the dovish vote split and communication.

As expected, the Bank of England (BoE) decided to cut the Bank Rate by 25bp to 4.50%. The vote split was 7-2 with the majority of members voting for a 25bp cut and Dhingra and Mann voting for a larger 50bp cut. This marks an important shift as Mann has been the most hawkish member of the MPC, voting for an unchanged decision the past many meetings. Mann stated that "a more activist approach at this meeting would give a clearer signal of financial conditions appropriate for the UK".

The BoE retained much of its previous guidance noting that "a gradual and careful approach to the further withdrawal of monetary policy restraint is appropriate" adding the word "careful" to reflect the higher degree of uncertainty. It likewise kept the wording that "monetary policy will need to continue to remain restrictive for sufficiently long until the risks to inflation returning sustainably to the 2% target in the medium term have dissipated further". In its updated projections, conditioned on a more hawkish implied Bank Rate path, the BoE revised growth significantly downwards while noting a high degree of uncertainty related to the trajectories of demand and supply in the economy. This will likely be key in determining the future path of interest rates for the MPC. Inflation was adjusted upwards in the near-term on the back of higher global energy costs and regulated price changes in the spring. Overall, we think the communication today supports our call of a continuous gradual approach to the cutting cycle. We expect the next 25bp cut in May with the Bank Rate ending the year at 3.75%. However, we highlight that the risk is skewed towards a swifter cutting cycle in 2025, given the clearly dovish bias within the MPC as evident from today's vote split and communication.

RatesGilt yields moved lower across the board on the dovish vote split. Markets price 7bp worth of cuts for March and 67bp by YE 2025. We highlight the potential for BoE to deliver more easing in 2025 than currently priced, expecting the next cut in May and a total of 100bp worth of easing in 2025.

FX. EUR/GBP moved higher on the announcement with the dovish vote split taking centre stage. The still cautious guidance delivered today highlights the more gradual approach of the BoE compared to European peers. More broadly, we expect EUR/GBP to move lower in the coming quarters driven by a relatively hawkish BoE, and a growth pickup in the UK relative to the euro area in 2025 and a USD-positive investment environment. The key risks are reignited debt concerns and a more forceful policy easing stance from the BoE

Download The Full Bank of England Review

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 bounces toward 1.1750 as US Dollar loses strength

EUR/USD returned to the 1.1750 price zone in the American session on Friday, despite falling Wall Street, which indicates risk aversion. Trading conditions remain thin following the New Year holiday and ahead of the weekend, with the focus shifting to US employment and European data scheduled for next week.

GBP/USD nears 1.3500, holds within familiar levels

After testing 1.3400 on the last day of 2025, GBP/USD managed to stage a rebound. Nevertheless, the pair finds it difficult to gather momentum and trades with modest intraday gains at around 1.3490 as market participants remain in holiday mood.

Gold trims intraday gains, approaches $4,300

Gold retreated sharply from the $4,400  area and trades flat for the day in the $4,320 price zone. Choppy trading conditions exacerbated the intraday decline, although XAU/USD bearish case is out of the picture, considering growing expectations for a dovish Fed and persistent geopolitical tensions.

Cardano gains early New Year momentum, bulls target falling wedge breakout

Cardano kicks off the New Year on a positive note and is extending gains, trading above $0.36 at the time of writing on Friday. Improving on-chain and derivatives data point to growing bullish interest, while the technical outlook keeps an upside breakout in focus.

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.

Crypto market outlook for 2026

Year 2025 was volatile, as crypto often is.  Among positive catalysts were favourable regulatory changes in the U.S., rise of Digital Asset Treasuries (DAT), adoption of AI and tokenization of Real-World-Assets (RWA).