BoE’s Taylor: “We enter this shock with a very weak economy”
Bank of England (BoE) policymaker Alan Taylor said on Tuesday that keeping interest rates on hold for an extended period remains the most appropriate policy response, according to the text of a speech due to be delivered at an event hosted by Barclays and the Center for Economic Policy Research.
Key takeaways:
An extended hold at this level is, to me, very much the correct and appropriately measured policy response we need.
Bank Rate is 75 bps above my estimate of neutral.
If more slack opens up like in BoE’s scenario ‘A’, we may end up having to cut quickly and could even see Bank Rate below neutral for a while.
In worst-case inflationary scenario, nothing is off table, BoE would have to do what it must to defend nominal anchor.
We enter this shock with a very weak economy.”
BoE’s Taylor leans cautiously dovish as extended hold masks rising cut risks for Pound
BoE’s Taylor scores 5.4/10 on FXS Speechtracker, notably above the 3.3/10 historic average. The emphasis that an “extended hold” is the “correct” response, even with Bank Rate 75 bps above Taylor’s estimate of neutral, frames current policy as deliberately restrictive but not yet at a pivot, which can cap immediate Pound upside.
The conditional guidance that, under scenario A, policy might need to be cut “quickly” and even move below neutral, combined with the admission that the United Kingdom enters this shock with a “very weak economy,” reinforces downside growth risks and a medium-term bias toward easing. At the same time, the warning that in a worst-case inflationary scenario “nothing is off the table” to defend the nominal anchor preserves a residual hawkish backstop, tempering but not erasing the overall dovish shift for Pound traders.
Author

Agustin Wazne
FXStreet
Agustin Wazne joined FXStreet as a Junior News Editor, focusing on Commodities and covering Majors.


















