Economy

Bank Of England To 'Cut Rates In August', At Least One More Expected This Year

Only two of 65 economists polled expected the BoE to wait until September to cut rates instead.

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Only two of 65 economists polled expected the BoE to wait until September to cut rates instead.

Economy

Bank Of England To 'Cut Rates In August', At Least One More Expected This Year

Only two of 65 economists polled expected the BoE to wait until September to cut rates instead.

Share this article

The Bank of England will start cutting interest rates in August, according to all but two of 65 economists polled by Reuters, and most of them expect at least one more reduction this year despite persistently high pay and services inflation.

One of the first central banks to start raising rates following the worst of the COVID pandemic, the BoE lifted Bank Rate by 515 basis points between December 2021 and August 2023 to a 16-year high of 5.25% to tackle soaring price pressures in the economy.

Overall inflation eased to 2.3% in April, close to the central bank's 2.0% target, from a peak of 11.1% in October 2022. A hot job market has started slowing and official statistics on Wednesday showed the economy stalled in April, partly due to exceptionally rainy weather.

However, wage and services inflation, both watched closely by the BoE, are still around 6%.

Only two of 65 economists polled expected the BoE to wait until September to cut rates instead of August. But all 24 who participated in both the latest and last month's poll and had previously forecast a cut on June 20 moved their call to August.

Financial markets are pricing only one BoE rate cut this year, in September.

"While we are seeing some tentative signs of cooling in the labour market, service sector inflation remains persistently high and it is likely the MPC would want to wait until the next set of forecasts and a few more data points before it embarks on its first rate cut," said Yael Selfin, chief UK economist at KPMG.

One set of labour market data and two more inflation releases are due before the Monetary Policy Committee meets in August, when it next releases detailed quarterly forecasts.

Asked if any other MPC members would vote for a rate cut in June - as Dave Ramsden and Swati Dhingra did in May - about three-quarters or 22 of 30 economists, who responded said No. The rest said Yes.

The poll median forecast showed Bank Rate would be a half-point lower at year-end. It was forecast at 5.00% at end-September and 4.75% at end-year, compared with 4.75% and 4.50%, respectively, in last month's poll.

Just over half of economists, 35 of 65, forecast two 25 basis point Bank Rate reductions to 4.75% by end-2024. Over one-third, 24 of 65, predicted 75 basis points of cuts to 4.50%, with three economists expecting Bank Rate even lower at 4.25%. The remaining three expected only one cut this year to 5.00%.

That prediction was similar to expectations for two quarter-point cuts this year by the U.S. Federal Reserve, which will announce its latest policy decision later on Wednesday but is not expected to cut rates until September at the earliest.

The European Central Bank started its cutting cycle on June 6 but with expectations policymakers there are in no hurry to follow up with a second one.

UK inflation was predicted to average slightly above the BoE's target of 2.0% across all quarters until at least the end of 2025, according to the poll. Median forecasts showed inflation averaging 2.5% this year and 2.2% next.

The economy was forecast to grow 0.3% in every quarter until end-2025, unchanged from last month's poll.

Over 2024 the economy was forecast to expand 0.7%, faster than last month's 0.5% prediction. Growth was predicted to accelerate to 1.2% and 1.4% in the following two years, respectively.

(Reporting by Shaloo Shrivastava; Polling by Sujith Pai and Vijayalakshmi Srinivasan; Editing by Ross Finley and Toby Chopra)

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Bank Of England To 'Cut Rates In August', At Least One More Expected This Year

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