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Slowly but surely, financial markets are coming around to the idea of four rate cuts from the Bank of England this year.
Slowly but surely, financial markets are coming around to the idea of four rate cuts from the Bank of England this year. Policymakers are poised to take rates lower by 25 basis points at its meeting on 6 February. And though they’ve not quite said so, it’s heavily implied that the Bank expects once-per-quarter cuts for the rest of this year. That's our base case, and markets are now pricing 78bp of easing by year-end, up from just 29bp in mid-January.
February’s meeting is unlikely to rock the boat too much, though if anything we think the risk is for a more dovish reaction in financial markets. Here’s what we expect:
Four Bank of England scenarios for February's meeting
We expect a 8-1 vote in favour of that 25bp cut, with arch-hawk Catherine Mann once again dissenting. She is yet to vote for a rate cut and had consistently voted for further hikes, long after the Bank’s tightening cycle had ended.
None of that would be remotely surprising, but if we’re going to get a dovish surprise, then this is where it’s going to come from. Remember at December’s meeting, three committee members voted for a cut, which – while still a minority – was more than many had expected. And the real surprise next week would be if Mann finally throws in the towel and votes for a cut. That feels unlikely, but it would be the single most dovish thing that realistically could happen at February’s meeting.
Could we see at least one official voting for a more aggressive 50bp cut? Again, possible, but unlikely. The most likely candidate would be Swati Dhingra, who lies at the opposite extreme to Mann. Were she to be a lone voice calling for faster easing, we suspect investors would conclude there’s little read-across to what other committee members might do at future meetings.
The BoE's data dashboard
We’ll get new growth and inflation forecasts this time and the overall theme is likely to be dovish. Growth is set to be revised down, in part because the recent data has been lacklustre. Fourth-quarter GDP will probably be flat where the BoE had previously pencilled in 0.3%. That lowers the starting point for 2025 annual growth. On top of that, market interest rates, which these forecasts are based upon, are up by roughly 50bp across the curve since November. Higher expected borrowing costs means weaker activity. Where the Bank previously had 2025 growth at 1.5%, it could be revised down to around 1%.
While that’s not hugely important for markets, it would shine a light on the Office for Budget Responsibility, the body that polices the government’s fiscal policy. At the time of the October budget, it expected growth of 2% this year, which looked optimistic at the time and has only grown more so since. That will inevitably get revised down in the Spring Statement on 26 March. If this is also the case for future years, that’s more bad news for the chancellor. Her fiscal “headroom” – the margin of error around the fiscal rules – has already been eradicated by the recent bond sell-off.
Markets are expecting higher BoE rates, relative to November
Back to the BoE, and on inflation the news is more mixed. Headline inflation is likely to be a little higher than it expected in November and could touch 3% (2.5% now) later this year. That’s mainly down to energy, though. And just as with growth, higher market rates will mechanically lower inflation further out.
The key number, as always, is where inflation is seen in two years’ time, the horizon over which monetary policy has its biggest impact. It’s likely to be at or below 2%, having been seen a tad above back in November. In theory, that tells us the Bank thinks rate expectations are a little too high to deliver inflation at target. In practice, the BoE has downplayed these forecasts as a signal about its future intentions.
Much like the Federal Reserve and European Central bank, the BoE is unlikely to be drawn much on what it’ll do next. Expect its policy statement to simply reiterate that further gradual easing is likely, without any comments about timing. Four rate cuts this year feels like the Bank’s base case, and that's our thinking too.
But don’t ignore the risk of more aggressive easing later this year. Markets have a tendency of lumping the BoE in the same category as the Fed, despite the macro story looking increasingly different in the UK.
Services inflation, the most critical indicator for the BoE, fell sharply in December. That may be a temporary blip – and it’ll likely bounce to 5% in January – but the trend is undoubtedly down. We expect it to slip below 4% in the second quarter, and the progress is likely to look even better when volatile/less relevant categories are excluded.
The jobs market is looking shaky, too. Employment in the private-sector, judging from payroll data, fell gradually in 2024. Vacancies are well down. Wage growth has been proving sticky, but surveys suggest that will gradually change as the year goes on.
Faster cuts aren’t our base case, but they remain more likely than a Fed-style pause later this year.
Gilt yields eased lower from their peak in early January, where the 10-year yield fell from 4.8% to 4.5% currently. Markets remain more sceptical about the BoE’s ability to ease, especially against a backdrop of increased government spending. Having said that, most of the recent gilt yield dynamics were actually dictated by US rate developments. And similarly to what we see for euro rates, we expect shorter-dated bond yields – e.g., gilts with a 2-year maturity – to start moving more independently from US influences. As such, the 2-year gilt yield might find itself significantly lower on a more dovish BoE, while the 10-year gilt is kept more anchored at elevated by levels by high 10-year UST yields.
The pound has made a mini-recovery from its gilt-led sell-off in mid-January. The global bond market rally has helped – as has the introduction of the BoE’s new gilt-crisis liquidity facility, the CNRF. But we doubt sterling has to rally too much further.
We say this because the prospect of UK fiscal consolidation in March should be pushing on the open door of an under-priced BoE easing cycle. This is a bearish combination for sterling.
In terms of the impact of Thursday’s BoE rate decision sterling, the FX market is very relaxed. The FX options market only prices in an expected 40 USD pip trading range for the one-day straddle options structure.
Additionally, the relationship between rate differentials and GBP/USD is far less pronounced ever since the Trump trade dominated market thinking from last October. Before then, an independent 10bp move in 10-year gilt yields was worth around 120 pips in GBP/USD. The risk premium around tariffs is clearly impacting GBP/USD now as it is for FX markets in general.
Nonetheless, potential downside risks to sterling are evident in the vote split or the growth forecast downgrade and what it means for the fiscal position. And through the second quarter, we think GBP/USD will be trading closer to 1.20 and EUR/GBP to 0.85.
The International Monetary Fund on Friday raised its forecast for global growth in 2025 by one-tenth of a percentage point, with stronger-than-expected growth in the US offsetting downward revisions in Germany, France and other major economies.
In its latest World Economic Outlook, the IMF projected global growth of 3.3% in both 2025 and 2026, and said global headline inflation was set to drop to 4.2% in 2025 and 3.5% in 2026, allowing a further normalization of monetary policy and ending the global disruptions of recent years.
But it said global growth remained below the historical average of 3.7% from 2000-2019, and warned countries against unilateral measures such as tariffs, non-tariff barriers or subsidies that could hurt trading partners and spur retaliation.
Such policies "rarely improve domestic prospects durably" and may leave "every country worse off," IMF chief economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas said in a blog released Friday.
The new IMF forecast comes just days before the inauguration of US President-elect Donald Trump, who has proposed a 10% tariff on global imports, a 25% punitive duty on imports from Canada and Mexico until they clamp down on drugs and migrants crossing borders into the US, and a 60% tariff on Chinese goods.
"An intensification of protectionist policies, for instance in the form of a new wave of tariffs, could exacerbate trade tensions, lower investment, reduce market efficiency, distort trade flows and again disrupt supply chains," the IMF said, noting growth could suffer both in the near and medium term.
Gourinchas told Reuters there was clearly "tremendous uncertainty" about future US policies that was already affecting global markets, but the global lender needed to wait for specifics to draw clearer conclusions.
Rising confidence and positive sentiment in the US could boost demand and spur near-term growth, but excessive deregulation especially in the financial sector could "generate boom-bust dynamics for the United States in the longer term, with repercussions for the rest of the world," the IMF wrote.
Gourinchas said the IMF would be looking carefully at any moves by the incoming US administration to deregulate digital currencies, noting the need to ensure adequate oversight of cross-border payments to avert future "runs" on the system.
"The payment system is the blood that irrigates the economy, and if there is the emergence of alternative forms of payments, and these become important in the economy, you also have the potential for collapses or runs," he said.
"This is a very fluid environment, but there is a need to be careful if there is a concentration of risks, if a few actors become critical for the payment system," he said.
Tariffs could make it harder for businesses to get needed inputs, leading to higher prices, and immigration restrictions — also promised by the incoming Trump administration — could lead to labour constraints, which could also raise costs, he said.
Looser US monetary policy, driven by tax cuts and other expansionary measures, could boost economic activity in the near term, but could require bigger fiscal adjustments later on that could weaken the role of US treasuries as a global safe asset, the IMF said. Higher borrowing could boost interest rates and depress economic activity elsewhere, it said.
The IMF said it raised its growth forecast for the United States to 2.7% based on robust labor markets and accelerating investment, an increase of half a percentage point from its October forecast, with growth to taper to 2.1% next year.
It cut its euro area forecast by 0.2 percentage points to 1.0% for 2025, and by 0.1 percentage point to 1.4% for 2026, citing weaker-than-expected momentum in manufacturing and heightened political and policy uncertainty.
Gourinchas said the divergence between the United States and Europe was due to structural factors, reflecting stronger US productivity growth particularly — but not exclusively — in the technology sector. It would linger, unless issues such as the business environment and deeper capital markets were addressed.
Germany's economy was forecast to grow just 0.3% in 2025, versus the 0.8% growth projected in October, with growth edging up to 1.1% in 2026, a downward revision of 0.3 percentage points.
France also had its forecast cut to 0.8% for 2025 from 1.1% in October, and to 1.1% for 2026 from 1.3%.
The IMF nudged its China growth forecast up by 0.1 percentage point to 4.6%, and by 0.4 percentage point to 4.5% for 2026, citing a fiscal stimulus package unveiled in November.
It cut the forecast for the Middle East and Central Asia region by 0.3 percentage point to 3.6% in 2025 and by the same amount to 3.9% for 2026, largely due to a downward revision for Saudi Arabia given recent voluntary oil production cuts.
The IMF said progress on lowering inflation was expected to continue, helped by the gradual cooling of labour markets and an expected decline in energy prices.
It said there was a risk of new inflationary pressures, fuelled by trade measures, that could result in higher-for-longer interest rates and could lead to a stronger dollar.
In a blog accompanying the outlook, Gourinchas said renewed inflation pressure could "well de-anchor inflation expectations" if they occurred so soon after the recent surge, which meant monetary policy would need to be more "agile and proactive."
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