BOE Set to Refrain From Second Straight Rate Cut

BOE Set to Refrain From Second Straight Rate Cut Ā· Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- The Bank of England is likely to decide on Thursday against making back-to-back interest-rates cuts, maintaining a patient approach to reversing the most aggressive policy tightening in decades.

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Economists and investors expect the Monetary Policy Committee to keep its benchmark rate at 5% after last month voting for the first reduction in over four years. The decision is due to be announced at 12 p.m. London time, a day after the Federal Reserve lowered its benchmark interest rate by a half percentage point.

Governor Andrew Bailey may provide investors more hints that the central bank will cut rates again in November. However, he is likely to resist explicitly endorsing the views of financial markets, which have grown more certain that policymakers will move to a quicker pace of easing.

Vote Split

After last monthā€™s tight 5-4 vote to lower rates from a 16-year high, most economists expect the MPC to revert to a 7-2 split in favor of keeping policy on hold.

Gauges of underlying inflation such as services prices remain higher than the BOE would like. If there are dissenting voices still pushing for a further reduction in borrowing costs, they are most likely to come from the BOEā€™s more dovish rate-setters, Swati Dhingra and Deputy Governor Dave Ramsden.

One unknown is the arrival of Alan Taylor, who has replaced one of the most hawkish rate-setters Jonathan Haskel. While he has not commented specifically on the UK recently, Taylorā€™s research has previously warned that tight monetary policy can hamper the economy for over a decade.

Forward Guidance

Economists are expecting little change to guidance that would leave the door open to another cut in November. The BOE said in August that it will take a meeting-by-meeting approach and stressed that policy will ā€œneed to continue to remain restrictive for sufficiently long.ā€

Bailey said at the Jackson Hole conference last month that rate-setters ā€œneed to be cautious because the job is not completed.ā€ However, he also signaled growing confidence that second-round inflation effects are ā€œsmaller than we expected.ā€

A cut ahead could be signaled if the minutes say a decision not to reduce rates again was ā€œfinely balanced.ā€ This language was used in June ahead of the August decision to begin easing.