Bank of England expected to leave interest rates on hold after rise in inflation – business live | Business


Introduction: Bank of England and ECB rate decisions today

Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.

Interest rates on both sides of the channel are likely to be left on hold today, but relief may be coming for UK borrowers within months.

Both the Bank of England (BoE) and the European Central Bank (ECB) are expected to maintain their respective interest rates unchanged today.

UK interest rates are currently 3.75%, and the rise in inflation in December to 3.4% makes it implausible that many BoE policymakers will vote to cut interest rates.

The City money markets indicate there is just a 5% chance that the BoE lowers interest rates to 3.5%, and a 95% likelihood that we get ‘no change’ at noon today.

Economists also predict seven policymakers will vote for a hold, with just two dovish members (Swati Dhingra and Alan Taylor) expected to vote for a cut.

But looking further ahead, almost two quarter-point cuts are expected by the end of this year.

Julien Lafargue, chief market strategist at Barclays Private Bank, says:

“The Bank of England is widely expected to keep interest rates unchanged in February. On the back of the Budget, we could see a more benign outlook on the inflation front, at least in the short-term.

When it comes to forward guidance, the BoE is likely to remain noncommittal about the timing of any future interest rate cuts. That said, the combination of lower inflation ahead and continued softening of the UK labour market should reinforce the central bank’s view that the path for monetary policy is towards a lower Bank rate, potentially as early as next month.”

Interest rates are already lower in the eurozone, at 2%, meaning there’s less pressure on the ECB to ease policy any further.

Eurozone inflation fell to 1.7% in January, data yesterday showed, thanks to lower energy costs and a stronger euro.

Richard Flax, chief investment officer at wealth manager Moneyfarm, says:

For investors, this environment of stable inflation and steady interest rates provides a degree of clarity and reduces the risk of further policy tightening.

We expect the ECB to remain on hold, as markets have already priced in, with a high bar for any policy action in the near term.

That said, we continue to monitor underlying price pressures and external risks, such as geopolitical developments and shifts in global demand, that could influence the outlook.”

The agenda

  • 8.30am GMT: eurozone construction PMI report for January

  • 9am GMT: UK car sales for January

  • 9.30am GMT: UK construction PMI report for January

  • Noon: Bank of England interest rates decision

  • 12.30pm GMT: BoE press conference

  • 1.15pm GMT: European Central Bank interest rate decision.

  • 1.45pm GMT: ECB press conference

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Key events

Shell shares slip after profits drop

Shares in oil giant Shell are slipping at the start of trading in London, after it reported a 40% drop in earnings.

Shell posted adjusted earnings of $3.25bn for the last three months of 2025, down from $5.43bn in July-September. In response, its shares are down 1% at £28.37 each.

The company blamed falling income on “unfavourable tax movements”, lower energy prices and higher operating expenses.

But despite this, Shell is planing to pump more money back to its shareholders through yet another share buyback plan, worth $3.5bn.

Shell chief executive officer, Wael Sawan:

2025 was a year of accelerated momentum, with strong operational and financial performance across Shell. We generated free cash flow of $26 billion, made significant progress in focusing our portfolio and reached $5 billion of cost savings since 2022, with more to come. In Q4, despite lower earnings in a softer macro, cash delivery remained solid and today we announce a 4% increase in our dividend and $3.5 billion share buyback, making this the 17th consecutive quarter of at least $3 billion of buybacks.”

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