Investing.com — Major investment banks are weighing in on the Bank of England’s monetary policy trajectory as the central bank navigates a challenging economic environment marked by weakening growth and persistent inflation pressures.
Analysts are closely monitoring the MPC’s next moves amid what some describe as a stagflationary backdrop, with conflicting signals from the real economy and price data shaping expectations for interest rates through 2027.
Citi analysts expect the MPC to hold Bank Rate at the June meeting and throughout the remainder of the year. The firm has pushed back its expected rate cuts, now forecasting the first reduction in late Q2 2027, followed by another in Q3, with a terminal rate of 3.25%.
Citi anticipates the June policy statement will maintain a hawkish tone, with analyst Megan Greene likely joining Huw Pill in voting for a hike. The firm describes the BoE’s stance as an “active hold,” arguing the hawkish communication is bigger than any actual policy tightening.
Citi notes the MPC faces a stagflationary dilemma, with the real economy showing cyclical weakness while input costs accelerate from external shocks. Despite weak economic data including rising unemployment and slowing wage growth, Citi expects the Committee to remain cautious about repeating past policy errors that allowed inflation to become embedded.
Meanwhile, Bank of America provides a comprehensive framework for understanding BoE policy mechanics in its primer on central bank watching. The firm emphasizes the BoE’s primary mandate to maintain price stability with a symmetric 2% inflation target, while supporting broader economic objectives including growth and employment.
BofA explains that the MPC’s inflation targeting approach is flexible, allowing the Committee to balance deviations from target against output volatility in the short run. The bank outlines the BoE’s policy toolkit, including Bank Rate as the primary instrument, quantitative easing through the Asset Purchase Facility, and other tools like forward guidance.
BofA notes the MPC’s nine-member structure operates on majority voting, with dissents common, and highlights the Committee’s communication strategy across eight annual meetings, four of which include full Monetary Policy Reports with economic forecasts.
