Bank of England to resume rate cuts with outlook complicated by tax hikes and Trump tariffs

Bank of England to resume rate cuts with outlook complicated by tax hikes and Trump tariffs


ECB and BOE could lower interest rates more than expected this year, BRI Wealth Management CEO

The Bank of England is widely expected to cut interest rates on Thursday, amid a complex backdrop of a tepid domestic growth outlook, an upcoming hike in taxes paid by businesses and U.S. President Donald Trump’s market-rattling tariff threats.

As of Wednesday morning, Money markets were pricing in a 98% probability of a quarter-point rate cut at the February meeting, which would take the Bank rate to 4.5%. The BOE opted to hold at its previous gathering in December, citing “elevated” services inflation of 5% and a higher-than-expected headline print of 2.6% in November. That rate has since cooled to 2.5%, while services inflation dropped to a 33-month low of 4.4%.

Since January, traders have ramped up their bets on the total number of BOE rate cuts likely to take place during 2025. Where at the start of the year only two trims were expected, economists and prominent business voices including the head of British bank Lloyds, Charlie Nunn, have said they anticipate three trims. Markets are meanwhile pricing more than 80 basis points’ worth of cuts by December, suggesting four reductions could be a possibility.

Those bets have built on the back of several data surprises, including weaker-than-expected retail sales data and disappointing November growth.

We expect 3 rate cuts in the UK this year, says Lloyds Banking Group CEO

Closely watched on Thursday will be the vote split among the nine members of the Monetary Policy Committee — with a unanimous or near-unanimous decision suggesting a bias toward easing — as well as the BOE’s updated growth and inflation projections.

The U.K. economy stagnated in the third quarter, and the BOE has already forecast that the final three months of last year also showed no growth.

Any downgrade to the BOE’s 2025 growth projections, or to its outlook for inflation to hit 2.7% in the fourth quarter of 2025 and ease to 2.2% across 2026, will be seen as support for the doves.

Uncertainty ahead

Two upcoming major developments could complicate the Bank’s forecasting, which BOE Governor Andrew Bailey is likely to be questioned on.

The first is how the central bank now views any potential inflationary impact from the fiscal reforms announced by the U.K. government in October, which include a significant hike in the tax that businesses face on payrolls. A survey by the British Chambers of Commerce published January said some firms were planning price rises as a result of higher costs.

Made with Flourish

The second question is how the U.K. will fare amid Trump’s volatile trade policy and the start of his tit-for-tat trade war with China, which is currently tamer than originally feared. Trump has threatened to slap tariffs on imports from the U.K. and European Union, but his delay of duties on Canada and Mexico has suggested other countries may be able to negotiate their way out of the fight.

It has also been suggested that the U.K. could benefit from wider trade disputes with the U.S. due to its more balanced trade relationship with the world’s biggest economy, allowing for an increase in U.K. investment and new trade opportunities.

UK Finance Minister Rachel Reeves: UK ‘not part of the problem’ when it comes to U.S. trade

“If Chinese goods find their way to the continent and into the U.K., and exert a downward pressure on prices, it gives the [European Central Bank] and the BOE more scope to lower interest rates more aggressively than markets are anticipating this year, especially as growth is expected to weaken over the coming quarters,” Dan Boardman-Weston, chief executive officer and chief investment officer of BRI Wealth Management, told CNBC’s “Street Signs” on Tuesday.

That is likely to reaffirm the monetary policy divergence between the BOE and the ECB — which markets view as likely to cut by a whole percentage point this year — and the U.S. Federal Reserve, seen trimming by a half-point at most.

Anthony Karaminas, global head of sub-advised fixed income at SEI, said that the U.K.’s situation of “stagflation-lite” — economic stagnation combined with above-target inflation — was a challenge for the BOE as it “seeks to support economic activity while also adhering to its explicit inflation mandate.”

“Looking ahead, sticky inflation might limit Governor Bailey’s ability to cut rates much further,” Karaminas said in emailed comments.

It the central bank presses ahead with a swift pace of easing, the U.K. government bond market “could suffer a credibility penalty in the form of a significantly higher term premium,” he said, adding this would limit the scope of the government to spend to boost the economy at a time when it “desperately needs a dose of productivity-driven growth.”

U.K. borrowing costs spiked in January amid a global bond market sell-off and stoked by concerns about Britain’s deficit and weak growth forecasts. Borrowing costs have since fallen significantly.



Source

Adopt this simple sleep habit if you’re tired of rushing, says time management expert: It’s ‘the least sexy, but the most impactful’
World

Adopt this simple sleep habit if you’re tired of rushing, says time management expert: It’s ‘the least sexy, but the most impactful’

Most people have a relatively consistent wakeup time. Fewer have a set bedtime, which could be the reason you feel lacking in free time during the day, says author and time management expert Laura Vanderkam. The logic works like this: Without consistent sleep habits, most people can be generally productive but struggle to stay consistently […]

Read More
The ‘Magnificent Seven’ drove the stock market to record highs in recent years. Is the trade over?
World

The ‘Magnificent Seven’ drove the stock market to record highs in recent years. Is the trade over?

The “Magnificent Seven” that propelled the broader market to record heights in recent years has been flipped on its head this year. All but two stocks in the group are in the red to start 2026, with Microsoft down nearly 18% and Tesla and Amazon each shedding more than 8%. Google-parent Alphabet , crowned one […]

Read More
India delays Washington trade visit as U.S. tariff policy shifts, source tells CNBC
World

India delays Washington trade visit as U.S. tariff policy shifts, source tells CNBC

US President Donald Trump (R) and India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi arrive for a joint press conference at Hyderabad House in New Delhi on February 25, 2020. (Photo by Prakash SINGH / AFP) (Photo by PRAKASH SINGH/AFP via Getty Images) Prakash Singh | Afp | Getty Images India’s trade negotiators will reschedule their planned visit […]

Read More