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Bank of England hold rates, extends bond reduction plan

Sterling jumped above $1.33 on the back of the decision

Published: Thu 19 Sep 2024, 4:01 PM

Updated: Thu 19 Sep 2024, 4:02 PM

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  • Reuters

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Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey. — AFP

Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey. — AFP

The Bank of England held interest rates at 5.0 per cent on Thursday and voted to run down its stock of British government bonds by another 100 billion pounds ($133 billion) over the coming 12 months, a move that could weigh on the government’s finances.

The Monetary Policy Committee voted 8-1 to keep rates on hold. Only external member Swati Dhingra voted for a further quarter-point rate cut after the BoE last month delivered its first reduction to borrowing costs since 2020.

Economists polled by Reuters had forecast a 7-2 vote to keep rates on hold after last month’s tight 5-4 decision to cut rates from their previous 16-year high.

Sterling jumped above $1.33 on the back of the decision, the highest the currency has been since March 2022, and investors scaled back bets on further cuts in Bank Rate for the remainder of the year.

On Wednesday, the US Federal Reserve cut rates by 0.5 percentage points - a larger-than-expected move that reflected the Fed’s confidence that inflation pressures were cooling.

The BoE struck a more cautious tone. Governor Andrew Bailey said cooling inflation pressure meant the BoE should be able to cut rates gradually over the months ahead.

“But it’s vital that inflation stays low, so we need to be careful not to cut too fast or by too much,” he said in a statement.

Investors think the British central bank will cut rates at a slower rate than the Fed over the next year, citing more persistent inflation pressure.

The BoE said inflation was likely to rise to around 2.5 per cent by the year’s end from 2.2 per cent in the most recent data, compared with a previous forecast of around 2.75 per cent. Lower oil prices contributed to the downgrade.

“The decision to keep base rates on hold aligns with our long-held view that the Bank will take a cautious approach to the start of the cutting cycle,” said Dean Turner, chief European economist at UBS Global Wealth Management.

After Thursday’s announcement, investors no longer fully priced two rate cuts by the end of 2024, as they had done earlier in the day. There was now a 2-in-3 chance of a cut in November which was previously seen as a foregone conclusion.

Financial markets now expect the BoE to cut rates in quarter-point moves four or five times by June. By contrast, they see around seven such cuts in the US, even after its outsized move on Wednesday.

QT continues

The MPC voted 9-0 to maintain the pace of its quantitative tightening programme in the 12 months starting in October 2024.

QT represents the sale of hundreds of billions of pounds of British government bonds purchased in past attempts to stimulate the economy, by letting these gilts mature but also through active sales.

The 100 billion-pound pace of QT over the coming 12 months will be the same as over the past year, in line with most market expectations.

Some investors had predicted an acceleration of QT, as the BoE holds 87 billion pounds of gilts that are due to mature naturally over the next year, leaving just 13 billion pounds for active gilt sales at the current pace.

Some lawmakers and think tanks have criticised QT because it brings forward losses sustained by the BoE, which purchased gilts in past years at much higher prices than their current sale value, and which are underwritten by the taxpayer.

The BoE also makes losses from paying interest on the reserves it issued to finance the purchases of gilts, which now far outstrips the returns generated by gilts.

Many economists think finance minister Rachel Reeves could change Britain’s fiscal rules to exclude the impact of the BoE’s QT programme in her inaugural budget on Oct. 30 - something that could give her several billion pounds of extra fiscal space.

The BoE stuck to its view that the QT process was proceeding smoothly, with only a “modest” impact on the stance of monetary policy overall, and that it was needed to ensure it could act flexibly in future crises.



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