FISCAL & MONETARY

BOE Leaves Rates on Hold, Hinting More Poised to Back Cuts

The Bank of England hinted that more policymakers may be close to backing interest rate cuts, keeping alive hopes of a loosening by the end of the summer.

The UK central bank left its benchmark lending rate on hold at a 16-year high of 5.25% on Thursday. But minutes of the meeting said the decision not to cut rates was "finely balanced" for some of the nine members of the Monetary Policy Committee.

The panel voted 7-2 in favor of no change for a second consecutive meeting, with Swati Dhingra and Deputy Governor Dave Ramsden both backing a reduction again. However, there were divisions among the majority about the importance of recent data that showed surprisingly strong services inflation.

There were indications that some MPC members, possibly including Governor Andrew Bailey, may be close to cutting rates, which have been on hold since last September. While the formal guidance to investors was unchanged, the language from some rate-setters on the latest decision being on a knife-edge could lead to more backing a reduction in August. 

Minutes of the meeting said some members believed that recent data "did not alter significantly the disinflationary trajectory that the economy was on." That would suggest BOE officials are increasingly comfortable that they can start to reduce rates, which the MPC says is weighing heavily on the economy. 

Others noted the risks from stubborn domestic price pressures in the services sector despite headline inflation falling to the BOE's 2% target for the first time in almost three years in May.

Bailey said in comments released alongside the minutes that the drop in inflation to 2% is "good news."

"We need to be sure that inflation will stay low and that's why we've decided to hold rates at 5.25% for now," he said.

It was the only comment from a BOE policy maker since Prime Minister Rishi Sunak called an election for July 4. BOE rate-setters have been silent during the campaign, meaning investors went into the June meeting with little insight from officials about how recent data surprises are affecting thinking on Threadneedle Street.

Bailey was seen as one of the rate-setters closer to cutting interest rates before hopes of a June reduction were dashed by stronger underlying inflation readings and the election. Bailey and others on the MPC had started to lay the groundwork for a move to easier policy in the summer until campaigning started.

While inflation fell to the BOE's 2% target, market bets on rate cuts in 2024 have retreated in recent months after stickiness in wages and services prices — key indicators being watched by policymakers.

Both services inflation and wage growth are running at levels seen as too high for the central bank to hold price growth at target sustainably. In its most recent forecasts, the BOE had expected services inflation to have eased to 5.3% by May but data on Wednesday showed it at 5.7%.

Investors have reined in bets on rate cuts over the summer and now expect just one in 2024, down from as many as six at the start of the year.

Markets are wagering that the BOE may be forced to wait until as late as November to begin easing policy. That would put it closer to the expected timing of the US Federal Reserve's first cut than the European Central Bank — which started loosening policy earlier this month. Central banks in Canada and Switzerland have also started to reduce borrowing costs.

The BOE said it expects GDP growth to much stronger in the second quarter after the sharp rebound from last year's recession. It now forecasts growth of 0.5% in the second quarter, up from its May forecast of 0.2%, continuing the strong start to the year. 

That upgrade is based on business surveys. While the UK economy bounced back from last year's recession in the first quarter with solid growth of 0.6%, data for April showed the recovery grinding to a halt. Private sector forecasters expect a pick-up from the 0.1% growth in 2023 to a still-anaemic 0.7%.

Source : Bloomberg

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