The Bank of England refrained from raising rates as widely expected by the markets shifting the rate hiking dilemma back to the Fed
Bloomberg
The Bank of England has decided once more to stand pat on rates and QE. For the past six and a half years the Bank of England has held the base rate steady at 0.5% and significantly open for debate as to when it will change them again. Consensus suggests that the next move will be higher. In March, the bank’s Governor Mark Carney made it clear that the next move was going to be up, whilst in July he suggested that a rate hike was moving closer, whilst the decision to start the normalisation of monetary policy could come into “sharper relief around the turn of the year”.
Chart of the interest rate on the UK 2yr paper, Source: Reuters
Then there’s Cable, which has been range bound for several months now. In a broad band between $1.5100/$1.5900, the outlook for sterling/dollar seems to be fairly neutral. This would take into effect the market’s outlook for the interest rate differentials between the UK and US. The rangeplay throughout the summer months suggests that the market is fairly settled and that the respective central banks are pretty much in lockstep. Expectation is that the Fed will be the first mover, with the Bank of England following closely behind.
Today’s Bank of England's minutes of the meeting do little to change this view. A slight cut in the staff growth projections to 0.6% is not to be unexpected in the wake of the disappointing increase in the UK trade deficit, whilst the inflation rate is expected to remain around zero for the next few months. The gains in productivity are a mixed message really as they convey a strengthening economy but also should not put too much pressure on prices. Furthermore, the current global market conditions are not having too great an impact on the bank’s policy, so it is as you were then.
There was though a slightly hawkish hint, in that “some” members are concerned with an overshoot of the 2% inflation target. Considering that only one member (Ian McCafferty) voted for a rate hike, this would suggest that one or more other members were ready to vote for a hike. This has driven some gains on sterling as a result and should help to underpin Cable moving into the crucial monetary policy meeting of the Federal Reserve next week. However, it is no game changer, at least, not yet.
What is likely though is that the UK is not in a dissimilar economic position to the US. The Bank of England will therefore be sure to pay close attention to the Fed next week. In this game of when “will they, won’t they?” the ball is back in the FOMC’s court. It’s over to you Chair Yellen!
The Bank of England has decided once more to stand pat on rates and QE. For the past six and a half years the Bank of England has held the base rate steady at 0.5% and significantly open for debate as to when it will change them again. Consensus suggests that the next move will be higher. In March, the bank’s Governor Mark Carney made it clear that the next move was going to be up, whilst in July he suggested that a rate hike was moving closer, whilst the decision to start the normalisation of monetary policy could come into “sharper relief around the turn of the year”.
Chart of the interest rate on the UK 2yr paper, Source: Reuters
Then there’s Cable, which has been range bound for several months now. In a broad band between $1.5100/$1.5900, the outlook for sterling/dollar seems to be fairly neutral. This would take into effect the market’s outlook for the interest rate differentials between the UK and US. The rangeplay throughout the summer months suggests that the market is fairly settled and that the respective central banks are pretty much in lockstep. Expectation is that the Fed will be the first mover, with the Bank of England following closely behind.
Today’s Bank of England's minutes of the meeting do little to change this view. A slight cut in the staff growth projections to 0.6% is not to be unexpected in the wake of the disappointing increase in the UK trade deficit, whilst the inflation rate is expected to remain around zero for the next few months. The gains in productivity are a mixed message really as they convey a strengthening economy but also should not put too much pressure on prices. Furthermore, the current global market conditions are not having too great an impact on the bank’s policy, so it is as you were then.
There was though a slightly hawkish hint, in that “some” members are concerned with an overshoot of the 2% inflation target. Considering that only one member (Ian McCafferty) voted for a rate hike, this would suggest that one or more other members were ready to vote for a hike. This has driven some gains on sterling as a result and should help to underpin Cable moving into the crucial monetary policy meeting of the Federal Reserve next week. However, it is no game changer, at least, not yet.
What is likely though is that the UK is not in a dissimilar economic position to the US. The Bank of England will therefore be sure to pay close attention to the Fed next week. In this game of when “will they, won’t they?” the ball is back in the FOMC’s court. It’s over to you Chair Yellen!
FM Intelligence Volume Rank: History, Present and Future
Featured Videos
FM Daily Brief - 21 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 21 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 21 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 21 May 2026
You are listening to Finance Magnates Daily Brief. Brought to you by Finance Magnates Intelligence. Today's Thursday, the twenty first of May 2026, and these are our main stories: CFD broker CMC Markets and Binance both target SpaceX exposure on the same day, IG Japan pauses retail vanilla options trading, and prediction markets expand across brokers and exchanges.
You are listening to Finance Magnates Daily Brief. Brought to you by Finance Magnates Intelligence. Today's Thursday, the twenty first of May 2026, and these are our main stories: CFD broker CMC Markets and Binance both target SpaceX exposure on the same day, IG Japan pauses retail vanilla options trading, and prediction markets expand across brokers and exchanges.
You are listening to Finance Magnates Daily Brief. Brought to you by Finance Magnates Intelligence. Today's Thursday, the twenty first of May 2026, and these are our main stories: CFD broker CMC Markets and Binance both target SpaceX exposure on the same day, IG Japan pauses retail vanilla options trading, and prediction markets expand across brokers and exchanges.
You are listening to Finance Magnates Daily Brief. Brought to you by Finance Magnates Intelligence. Today's Thursday, the twenty first of May 2026, and these are our main stories: CFD broker CMC Markets and Binance both target SpaceX exposure on the same day, IG Japan pauses retail vanilla options trading, and prediction markets expand across brokers and exchanges.
Today’s lead: CFD brokers show a wide divergence in per-account trading activity. Also ahead, a deep dive into IG Group and XTB’s latest numbers. It's Wednesday, 20 May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CFD brokers show a wide divergence in per-account trading activity. Also ahead, a deep dive into IG Group and XTB’s latest numbers. It's Wednesday, 20 May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CFD brokers show a wide divergence in per-account trading activity. Also ahead, a deep dive into IG Group and XTB’s latest numbers. It's Wednesday, 20 May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CFD brokers show a wide divergence in per-account trading activity. Also ahead, a deep dive into IG Group and XTB’s latest numbers. It's Wednesday, 20 May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CFD brokers show a wide divergence in per-account trading activity. Also ahead, a deep dive into IG Group and XTB’s latest numbers. It's Wednesday, 20 May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: CFD brokers show a wide divergence in per-account trading activity. Also ahead, a deep dive into IG Group and XTB’s latest numbers. It's Wednesday, 20 May 2026. You're listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
FM Daily Brief - 19 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 19 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 19 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 19 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 19 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 19 May 2026
Today's lead: IG Group has lifted its full-year revenue outlook after a strong quarter. Also ahead, Swissquote sets a date for its one-to-ten share split. And CMC Markets’ UK head says neobanks are becoming trading distributors. It’s Tuesday, 19 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: IG Group has lifted its full-year revenue outlook after a strong quarter. Also ahead, Swissquote sets a date for its one-to-ten share split. And CMC Markets’ UK head says neobanks are becoming trading distributors. It’s Tuesday, 19 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: IG Group has lifted its full-year revenue outlook after a strong quarter. Also ahead, Swissquote sets a date for its one-to-ten share split. And CMC Markets’ UK head says neobanks are becoming trading distributors. It’s Tuesday, 19 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: IG Group has lifted its full-year revenue outlook after a strong quarter. Also ahead, Swissquote sets a date for its one-to-ten share split. And CMC Markets’ UK head says neobanks are becoming trading distributors. It’s Tuesday, 19 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: IG Group has lifted its full-year revenue outlook after a strong quarter. Also ahead, Swissquote sets a date for its one-to-ten share split. And CMC Markets’ UK head says neobanks are becoming trading distributors. It’s Tuesday, 19 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today's lead: IG Group has lifted its full-year revenue outlook after a strong quarter. Also ahead, Swissquote sets a date for its one-to-ten share split. And CMC Markets’ UK head says neobanks are becoming trading distributors. It’s Tuesday, 19 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
FM Daily Brief - 18 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 18 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 18 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 18 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 18 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 18 May 2026
Today’s lead: Cyprus authorities detain suspects in a forex-linked criminal probe. Also ahead: Kraken’s IPO timeline slips further, and CMC Markets expands its Spectre product to retail clients. It’s Monday, 18 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Cyprus authorities detain suspects in a forex-linked criminal probe. Also ahead: Kraken’s IPO timeline slips further, and CMC Markets expands its Spectre product to retail clients. It’s Monday, 18 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Cyprus authorities detain suspects in a forex-linked criminal probe. Also ahead: Kraken’s IPO timeline slips further, and CMC Markets expands its Spectre product to retail clients. It’s Monday, 18 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Cyprus authorities detain suspects in a forex-linked criminal probe. Also ahead: Kraken’s IPO timeline slips further, and CMC Markets expands its Spectre product to retail clients. It’s Monday, 18 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Cyprus authorities detain suspects in a forex-linked criminal probe. Also ahead: Kraken’s IPO timeline slips further, and CMC Markets expands its Spectre product to retail clients. It’s Monday, 18 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: Cyprus authorities detain suspects in a forex-linked criminal probe. Also ahead: Kraken’s IPO timeline slips further, and CMC Markets expands its Spectre product to retail clients. It’s Monday, 18 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
FM Daily Brief - 15 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 15 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 15 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 15 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 15 May 2026
FM Daily Brief - 15 May 2026
Today’s lead: The US Senate Banking Committee approved the Clarity Act, moving US lawmakers closer to a full Senate vote. Also ahead, AI agents plug into cTrader trading workflows, and OANDA Japan ends MT4 and MT5 web access. It’s Friday, 15 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: The US Senate Banking Committee approved the Clarity Act, moving US lawmakers closer to a full Senate vote. Also ahead, AI agents plug into cTrader trading workflows, and OANDA Japan ends MT4 and MT5 web access. It’s Friday, 15 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: The US Senate Banking Committee approved the Clarity Act, moving US lawmakers closer to a full Senate vote. Also ahead, AI agents plug into cTrader trading workflows, and OANDA Japan ends MT4 and MT5 web access. It’s Friday, 15 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: The US Senate Banking Committee approved the Clarity Act, moving US lawmakers closer to a full Senate vote. Also ahead, AI agents plug into cTrader trading workflows, and OANDA Japan ends MT4 and MT5 web access. It’s Friday, 15 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: The US Senate Banking Committee approved the Clarity Act, moving US lawmakers closer to a full Senate vote. Also ahead, AI agents plug into cTrader trading workflows, and OANDA Japan ends MT4 and MT5 web access. It’s Friday, 15 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.
Today’s lead: The US Senate Banking Committee approved the Clarity Act, moving US lawmakers closer to a full Senate vote. Also ahead, AI agents plug into cTrader trading workflows, and OANDA Japan ends MT4 and MT5 web access. It’s Friday, 15 May 2026. You’re listening to the Finance Magnates Daily Brief.