Christmas Rate Cut Hangs in Balance as Bank of England Meets
The Bank of England faces a critical decision this week on whether to implement a pre-Christmas interest rate cut, with hopes rising for the sixth reduction in just over a year.
Budget Uncertainty Clouds Decision
Experts warn that Chancellor Rachel Reeves’ upcoming Budget, expected to include significant tax increases, could force the Bank to maintain the current 4% interest rate. The scale of potential tax rises and public spending cuts creates too much uncertainty for immediate action.
‘It is likely to be a factor in the December decision,’ said Ellie Henderson, economist at investment bank Investec.
Henderson noted that inflation at 3.8% remains nearly double the Bank’s 2% target, providing additional reason for caution this month.
Market Expectations and Pound Pressure
Traders currently estimate a 50:50 chance of a December rate cut. The growing possibility has already put significant pressure on the British pound, which fell below €1.14 last week – its lowest level against the euro in two and a half years. Against the dollar, sterling dropped to a six-month low of $1.31.
‘Sterling has had a Halloween shocker,’ said Simon Phillips of travel cash firm No1 Currency.
In an ominous development for the Chancellor, speculators have resumed betting against the pound ahead of the Budget, reaching levels similar to those seen during the 2022 Liz Truss mini-Budget crisis. Reeves may need to find up to £50 billion to meet her fiscal rules, adding to market uncertainty.




