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Bank of England keeps interest rates on hold | Bank of England keeps interest rates on hold |
(32 minutes later) | |
The Bank of England has kept interest rates on hold at 0.75% but indicated it may cut the cost of borrowing if global economic growth fails to recover or Brexit uncertainties persist. | |
It said the UK economy was expected to pick up from its current weakness. | It said the UK economy was expected to pick up from its current weakness. |
However, the Bank said it would monitor companies' and households' reactions to Brexit as well as global growth. | However, the Bank said it would monitor companies' and households' reactions to Brexit as well as global growth. |
The Bank's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) voted 7-2 in favour of keeping the official rate on hold. | The Bank's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) voted 7-2 in favour of keeping the official rate on hold. |
"If global growth fails to stabilise or if Brexit uncertainties remain entrenched, monetary policy may need to reinforce the expected recovery in GDP growth and inflation," the committee said in a statement. | "If global growth fails to stabilise or if Brexit uncertainties remain entrenched, monetary policy may need to reinforce the expected recovery in GDP growth and inflation," the committee said in a statement. |
Third-quarter gross domestic product (GDP) growth of 0.3% was "a little weaker" than the MPC expected at its November meeting, when members also voted 7-2 to keep rates on hold. | |
It said household spending continued to grow steadily, but business investment and export orders had remained weak. | |
The Bank predicted fourth quarter growth of 0.1% which again was a weaker outlook than at its last meeting. | |
It now expects inflation to subside to 1.25% in the spring. That largely reflects weakness in the construction sector, it said. | |
The Bank's agents around the UK, who monitor regional economic activity, gave the construction sector its lowest score in six-and-a-half years. | |
The agents also highlighted falling manufacturing exports, with the car-making sector suffering one of the biggest declines. | |
'Pressure' | 'Pressure' |
The weak economy meant companies could not fully pass on higher costs to their customers even as those costs rose, squeezing profit margins. | |
"All sectors were affected, but margins were most squeezed in construction and consumer facing sectors," the MPC said. | "All sectors were affected, but margins were most squeezed in construction and consumer facing sectors," the MPC said. |
For those consumer-facing firms, the pressure on margins was heightened by the shift towards online shopping, higher business rates and the rise in the National Living Wage, it added. | |
That was one factor adding to weak investment. "Investment intentions remain depressed by slower global growth and political uncertainty," the MPC said. | |
However, it also said that if global growth did stabilise and Brexit uncertainties faded then the next move in interest rates may be up. | |
Outlook 'exceptionally cloudy' | |
Economists were divided over the direction of rates. | |
Dean Turner, an economist at UBS Wealth Management, said: "After last week's election result, the short-term clarity we have on Brexit could give a lift to economic sentiment, especially for businesses. A modest fiscal easing in the forthcoming budget could also push things along a little. | |
"Overall, though, as attention turns to the December 2020 end of transition deadline, the mood will likely remain subdued and growth weak. We expect that the committee will move further towards a rate cut in 2020 and a quarter point easing in May." | |
But Samuel Tombs, chief UK economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said: "All told, we still think that interest rates are much more likely to rise next year than to fall. | |
"But as both the identity of the next [Bank of England] Governor and the willingness of the Prime Minister to sacrifice the economy to achieve Brexit by his timetable are unknown, the outlook for monetary policy remains exceptionally cloudy." |