BOE Embraces Caution After Year That Failed to Deliver on Rates

(Bloomberg) -- The Bank of England entered the year with investors expecting six interest-rate cuts, a sudden easing that promised to breathe life into the UK economy. It will end 2024 holding borrowing costs a full percentage point higher than forecast 12 months ago.

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The British central bank is expected to leave rates unchanged at 4.75% at its meeting on Thursday and maintain its guidance that a “gradual approach to removing policy restraint remains appropriate.” While BOE Governor Andrew Bailey has said that four cuts over the course of 2025 are likely, markets — perhaps stung by their aggressive bets a year ago — are pricing in just three, starting in February.

The Dec. 19 decision, in what is projected to be a wait-and-see meeting, will conclude a very different year to the one predicted by traders and some economists in January when Britain was emerging from a mild recession with rates at a 16-year high.

Then, markets were forecasting six quarter-point-cuts to 3.75% in 2024 – a path endorsed by Goldman Sachs economist Sven Jari Stehn. Instead, the BOE made just two, in August and November, as officials fretted that easing too quickly into a tight labor market risked reigniting inflation.

Their reluctance to lift the brakes has left the BOE lagging behind the easing cycles of its US and eurozone counterparts and made the pound the best-performing Group of 10 currency this year.

The result is that monetary policy has borne down harder on inflation, which has fallen faster than the BOE forecast and is now just above the 2% target. Bailey said it was a sign of success.

But businesses, consumers and homeowners accused the bank of inflicting unnecessary pain. The BOE even came under political pressure to cut rates ahead the July general election, with the then-Conservative chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, repeatedly invoking the prospect of cheaper money as he sought a feel-good factor in the economy. His intervention was criticised by economists and former officials for encroaching on the independence of the central bank.

Pricing at the start of the year was heavily influenced by developments in the US. Money markets bet that both the BOE and the Federal Reserve would deliver one and half points of cuts. Expectations soon changed after it became clear the US economy was faring much better than expected, and that the BOE was unconvinced it had won the battle to tame underlying prices pressures in the services sector.