关注每日评论,做出明智的交易决策

注册
News logo featuring a globe and various related items, symbolizing global news coverage and information dissemination.

Bank of England to Cut Rates in August?

At its meeting on Thursday, the 19th of June, the Bank of England decided to stall its key interest rate, keeping it at 4.25%. Out of the nine members, three have voted for a 25-basis-point cut and the majority of six have opted to hold rates. Many economists expect that the BOE will continue cutting rates in August.

This move was widely expected for June. The world was already in a tense geopolitical situation before the Israel-Iran conflict. That conflict has only made things worse. The new conflict and fears of the US pulling back on support for Ukraine are causing market tensions and are fuelling negative emotions. On a global economy level, Trump’s looming tariffs threaten to disrupt key partnerships and shift trade balances significantly.

The BOE reemphasised its previous notion, stating that “given the outlook, and continued disinflation, a gradual and careful approach to the further withdrawal of monetary policy restraint remains appropriate.” This timid stance serves to avoid an excessive commitment to aggressive cuts until “the risks to inflation returning sustainably to the 2% target in the medium term have dissipated further.”

In general, the MPC, the BOE’s deciding committee, wishes to remain sure that its policy matches the “heightened unpredictability” present in both domestic and global conditions.

However, that does not mean that the outlook is bleak. Disinflation is pressuring the UK, and the labour market has shown a poor performance. As such, a move to spur the economy may prove imminent, while already lining up with the BOE’s eventual goal of returning inflation to around 2%, and yearly goal of rates slipping below 3.75%.

The UK’s current position

The UK has had a somewhat concerning performance in April, with the economy shrinking by 0.3%. This wiped out much of the progress the UK made earlier in the year. The economy had expanded by 0.7% across January, February, and March.

The labour market has also shown a retraction. Vacancies have dropped significantly, losing 5.3% compared to the previous quarter. With the current figure at 761,000, the market is underperforming even pre-pandemic numbers, and by 4.3%. Year-on-year, this marks a 14.7% decline, with the UK experiencing a long streak of disappointing quarterly labour market performance. The unemployment-to-vacancy ratio with this data is at 2.1, up from 1.9 last quarter.

Further building pressure, unemployment levels are rising with wage growth staggering. All of this indicates that the market is in need of a jolt. However, the BOE is vigilant in ensuring that any cut is done properly, within the right global and domestic context.

What happened at the BOE meeting

Three of the nine BOE members voted for a rate cut, shifting the balance toward the dovish side. Dhingra, Ramsden, and Taylor were the MPC members that favoured a 25bp rate reduction. This surprised some who were expecting a 7-2 split and was a potential signal of a degree of urgency coming from the MPC.

There are clear signs that “a margin of slack” has been created, said UK’s central bank in a statement. It is concerned with GDP growth remaining shoddy, and the labour market’s prolonged exhaustion.

Another particular pain point is pay growth. As noted, it weakened compared to the previous period and is expected to slow further. As such, the MPC stated that it “remains vigilant about the extent to which easing pay pressures will feed through to consumer price inflation.”

Next, there’s an unignorable increase in global uncertainty. Concerns of energy deficiency arose with the new Israel-Iran conflict, with the risk of Iran, a major oil producer, becoming unable to deliver energy materials to its importers. Another risk is the potential blockage of the Strait of Hormuz, a major chokepoint for Gulf energy exporters. A prolonged stoppage may lead to difficulties in global energy supplies.

Economists highlighted that a degree of caution and flexibility is crucial. If oil supplies were to plummet, for instance, the inflationary pressure may make rate cuts impossible unless they were to break the backs of consumers. In such a scenario, the MPC may even be expected to halt its rate cut plan altogether and transition to a hawkish stance.

Incoming rate cuts?

Amid the building pressure on the UK economy, experts, including economists polled by Reuters, predict a 25 bps rate cut in the following quarter. Furthermore, they expect that to be followed by another 25 bps cut in the final quarter of the year. However, there is some difficulty in predicting the BOE’s strategy.

The global uncertainty and the speed and unpredictability at which these events happen are making specific predictions difficult. Still, the BOE has shown clear signs that, by the end of the year, they would like rates to hover slightly below 4%. Additional encouragement comes from the UK’s overnight swaps market, which is now estimating an 84% chance of a cut on the 7th of August.

Market reactions; what a rate cut could imply

With no actual action taken the results after the meeting on Thursday were fairly dull. EUR/GBP showed a slight increase, but nothing alarming for the forex market. The FTSE 100, the UK’s primary benchmark index, reacted sharply, losing much ground on Thursday’s close but recovering all of that and trending upwards on Friday.

However, these muted reactions are to be expected. In general, when releases yield expected results, markets tend to ignore them and move on to other factors. Still, if rate cuts were to arrive in August, the market could show a more significant reaction.

With rate cuts, spending is encouraged over saving, and borrowing becomes cheaper. While this creates a positive sentiment, fixed-income assets like bonds benefit the most.

For traders, FTSE 100, GBP/EUR, and other minor and exotic pairs that use the pound sterling are worth watching. The deciding factor in their movement, if the rate cuts do come, will be what the surrounding context is. In a positive climate, rate cuts boost sentiment. However, if the UK keeps struggling, rate cuts may indicate recession fears, causing volatility and investor uncertainty.

免责声明: 本信息不被视为投资建议或投资推荐, 而是一种营销传播. IronFX 对本信息中引用或超链接的第三方提供的任何数据或信息概不负责.

订阅我们的时事通讯



    请注意,您的电子邮件将仅用于营销目的。欲了解更多信息,请阅读我们的 隐私策略
    分享:
    博客搜索
    Affiliate World
    Global
    阿联酋,迪拜
    28 February – 1 March 2022

    IronFX Affiliates

    iFX EXPO Dubai

    22-24 February 2022

    Dubai World Trade Center

    Meet us there!

    Iron世界锦标赛

    总决赛

    美元 奖池*

    *条款与条件适用。

    iron-world
    iron-world

    Iron World

    11月16日 – 12月16日

    最少入金$5,000

    所有交易都涉及风险。
    您可能会损失所有资本。

    The Iron Worlds Championship

    one-million

    美元 奖池*

    planet-usd-thunder
    planet-usd-thunder

    Titania World

    10月 15日 – 11月 15日

    最低存款$3,000

    *T&C apply. All trading involves risk.
    It is possible to lose all your capital.

    Iron世界锦标赛

    one-million

    美元 奖池*

    elements-desktop
    elements-mobile

    Tantalum World

    14 September– 14 October

    Minimum Deposit $500

    *T&C apply. All trading involves risk.
    It is possible to lose all your capital.

    感谢您访问 IronFX

    本网站不针对英国居民,不属于欧洲和MiFID II监管框架,以及英国金融行为管理局手册中规定的规则、指导和保护.

    请让我们知道您想如何进行.

    感谢您访问 IronFX

    本网站不针对欧盟居民,不属于欧洲和MiFID II监管框架的范围。
    如果您仍希望继续访问 IronFX,请单击下方

    Iron世界锦标赛

    one-million

    美元 奖池*

    Phosphora World

    14 August - 13 September

    Minimum Deposit $500

    *T&C apply. All trading involves risk.
    It is possible to lose all your capital.