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Bank of England leaves interest rates unchanged at 5.25%, 7th time in a row

Bank of England leaves interest rates unchanged at 5.25%, 7th time in a row
Katya Stead
Jun 20, 2024, 07:24 AM
  • Bank of England has kept United Kingdom's interest rate unchanged at 5.25%.
  • This is the seventh consecutive meeting at which the central bank has held interest rates steady.  
  • However, the majority of England is ready for a rate cut, according to a recent BoE survey.

Bank of England on Thursday kept interest rates unchanged at 5.25%. This is the seventh consecutive meeting at which the central bank has held interest rates steady.  

In a statement, BoE stated:

Meeting market expectations

Prior to the announcement, analysts were expecting the BoE to hold interest rates steady again at 5.25%, meaning no surprises for the market upon the announcement.

In fact, analysts were anticipating a grand total of 7 MPC members would vote for interest rates to remain unchanged in the UK, versus just 2 voting for a rate cut. It was predicted that no MPC members would vote for a rate hike.

"The expectation was that the Bank will keep its key rate unchanged, despite yesterday’s inflation report where Headline CPI fell back to the 2% target rate for the first time in nearly three years," David Morrison, analyst at Fineqia, explains:

England ready for a rate cut

Out recently on June 14th, the Bank of England also published an ‘Ipsos Inflation Attitudes’ survey.

As part of the survey, respondents were asked ‘what would be best for the economy – higher interest rates, lower rates or no change?’

A 42% majority said that interest rates should go down, while 24% said they should remain unchanged. A mere 10% thought rates should go up.

When asked about the future path of interest rates, 34% of the survey respondents expected rates to rise over the next 12 months, down from 36% in February 2024.

A mere 25% said they expected rates to stay about the same over the next twelve months, down from 26% in February 2024.

Tellingly, the BoE did not mention how many respondents expected interest rates to fall over the next year.

On Wednesday, Office of National Statistics announced UK inflation reached its target of 2% in May, sparking afresh the debate that it was time for rate cuts.