BoE Seen Holding Rates Amid Iran Risks
2026-04-30 05:56
By
Agna Gabriel
1 min. read
The Bank of England is widely expected to keep interest rates unchanged at 3.75%, as policymakers grapple with heightened uncertainty stemming from the ongoing Iran conflict and its inflationary impact.
Governor Andrew Bailey and the Monetary Policy Committee are likely to resist any immediate policy shift, instead focusing on scenario analysis to assess how a prolonged energy shock could affect growth, jobs, and price stability.
Rising oil and gas costs have disrupted the prior disinflation trend, with evidence mounting that higher input prices are feeding through to consumers.
While markets have flirted with pricing in rate hikes, most economists expect a cautious hold, reflecting limited clarity on the duration of the shock and still-fragile labour market conditions.
Communication will be key after March’s market volatility, with officials expected to strike a more balanced tone, acknowledging upside inflation risks while avoiding signals that could trigger another sharp repricing.