logo
Bank of England maintains interest rates at 4.25 percent citing a 'highly unpredictable world'

Bank of England maintains interest rates at 4.25 percent citing a 'highly unpredictable world'

Economy ME19-06-2025
The Bank of England (BoE)
maintained the U.K. interest rates at 4.25 percent on Thursday, citing a 'highly unpredictable world' as the reason for this decision. The Bank's nine-member Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) voted with a majority of six to three in favor of keeping rates unchanged.
Three committee members—Swati Dhingra, Dave Ramsden, and Alan Taylor—voted to lower the rate by 0.25 percentage points to 4 percent. Despite Thursday's decision, the Bank emphasized that interest rates are on a 'downward path.'
The Monetary Policy Committee voted by a majority of 6-3 to keep interest rates at 4.25%
Find out more:
https://t.co/rcGJUYFkWZ
pic.twitter.com/VkO9vZyjgS
— Bank of England (@bankofengland)
June 19, 2025
Andrew Bailey, the governor of the Bank of England, stated: 'Interest rates remain on a gradual downward path, although we've left them on hold today. The world is highly unpredictable. In the U.K. we are seeing signs of softening in the labour market. We will be looking carefully at the extent to which those signs feed through to consumer price inflation.'
The last time the Bank cut interest rates was in May, when they were reduced by 0.25 percent to the current level of 4.25 percent.
U.K. consumer prices increased by 3.4 percent in May on an annualized basis, representing a rise of 0.8 percentage points compared to March. Economists have chosen to overlook the reading from April due to a correction in the Office for National Statistics data.
Read more: Bank of England slashes interest rates to 4.25 percent amid global trade uncertainty
Norway's first rate cut since pandemic
In a similar move, Norway's central bank has reduced interest rates by 25 basis points to 4.25 percent, marking the first cut since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic. Norges Bank had indicated in March that it anticipated lowering its key sight deposit rate in June and has now followed through on that plan.
'Inflation has declined since the monetary policy meeting in March, and the inflation outlook for the coming year indicates lower inflation than previously expected,' stated Ida Wolden Bache, the central bank's governor. 'A cautious normalization of the policy rate will pave the way for inflation to return to target without restricting the economy more than necessary.'
The interest rate cuts were largely anticipated by economists.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mideast Stocks: Most Gulf bourses slip on geopolitics, Fed rate cut uncertainty
Mideast Stocks: Most Gulf bourses slip on geopolitics, Fed rate cut uncertainty

Zawya

time3 hours ago

  • Zawya

Mideast Stocks: Most Gulf bourses slip on geopolitics, Fed rate cut uncertainty

Most Gulf equities ended lower on Monday, led by the Qatar index, as investors turned cautious while awaiting developments from a meeting between the U.S. and Ukraine presidents, and an annual Federal Reserve conference at Jackson Hole. Friday's U.S. data showed July retail sales rose as expected, but weaker consumer confidence and softer factory output suggested tariffs were weighing on parts of the economy, clouding the Fed's rate path. Traders are pricing an about 85% chance of a 25-basis-point cut on September 17, with further easing by year-end. Monetary policy shifts in the U.S. have a significant impact on Gulf markets, where most currencies are pegged to the dollar. Meanwhile, U.S. President Donald Trump said Ukraine should abandon hopes of regaining annexed Crimea or joining NATO, ahead of a meeting with Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelenskiy and European leaders in Washington. The Qatari benchmark index was down for a second day and fell 0.6% as investors took profits after an earnings-fuelled rally, with all constituents in the red. Qatar National Bank declined 0.9% and Industries Qatar fell 1.5%. Saudi Arabia's benchmark stock index slipped 0.1%, ending a two-session rise, with most stocks lower. ACWA Power fell 1.5%, while Saudi Arabian Mining and Umm Al Qura for Development and Construction each lost 1.1%. Umm Al Qura said it sold a land plot for 145.1 million riyals. The Abu Dhabi benchmark index eased 0.1%, its ninth straight decline and longest losing streak since February 2024. Abu Dhabi Islamic Bank fell 1.6% and First Abu Dhabi Bank slipped 1.3%. "GCC markets are exhibiting signs of consolidation after a period of strong gains following the end of the Q2 earnings season," said Milad Azar, market analyst at XTB MENA. Dubai's benchmark stock index rose for a third straight session and inched up 0.1%, supported by gains in finance and real estate shares. Emaar Properties advanced 1% and Emirates NBD, the emirate's largest lender, added 1.2%. Outside the Gulf, Egypt's blue-chip index fell 0.4%, pressured by a 3.8% drop in a tobacco maker Eastern Company and a 1.3% decline in Talaat Moustafa. Arabian Cement jumped 5.6% after second-quarter group profit more than tripled. SAUDI ARABIA lost 0.1% to 10,886 KUWAIT down 0.4% to 9,318 QATAR fell 0.6% to 11,516 EGYPT down 0.4% to 35,825 BAHRAIN lost 0.1% to 1,934 OMAN up 0.2% to 4,930 ABU DHABI down 0.1% to 10,213 DUBAI added 0.1% to 6,129 (Reporting by Md Manzer Hussain; Editing by Leroy Leo)

The Trump-Putin summit shows why Europe needs to continue re-arming itself
The Trump-Putin summit shows why Europe needs to continue re-arming itself

The National

time6 hours ago

  • The National

The Trump-Putin summit shows why Europe needs to continue re-arming itself

Much store has been placed over the past eight months in how foreign leaders prepare to interact with US President Donald Trump. From a European point of view, there has been a carousel of winners and losers. Take, for example, a write-up in The Wall Street Journal of the golfing prowess of Finnish President Alexander Stubb and how that was key to the relationship between the two men. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer would have enjoyed the headline on Monday that said he was hoping to 'exploit his curious relationship' with the US leader to the benefit of Ukraine. Mr Trump appears to enjoy it all. Going back to his first term and the notorious handshaking with French President Emmanuel Macron, Mr Trump sees meeting European leaders as a kind of vaudeville performance. At the start of this week, he was boasting that Monday's White House gathering on Ukraine was a big day in history. 'Never had so many European Leaders at one time. My great honour to host them!!!' Step back from all the stage management, and the reality is that Mr Trump and the new American political establishment see the Europeans as all one, not the individual performers that the news reports highlight. The war in Ukraine appears to have reached the moment of truth. By abandoning demands for a ceasefire as a gateway to peace talks during his Alaska summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Mr Trump has established how the conflict can now end. For the Europeans, this means the transactional basis of US foreign policy going forward is a fundamental reality that cannot be wished away anymore. Nor even blunted by the kind of summit theatrics we have seen over recent months. The Europeans must now follow through on the generational change the continent's leaders have promised on its collective defence. This means all nations need to match the kind of uplift that Germany has promised. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz arrived at the White House on Monday having promised to raise defence spending to 3.5 per cent of national gross domestic product by 2029. It also means that leaders must be more ruthless in the dollars versus euros choices that the Europeans are making when buying defence equipment. Put simply, to defend itself Europe must now more aggressively buy European as a long-term strategic play. The third aspect of this is that the Europeans must show they are prepared to join in delivering what it takes to be robust in their own self-defence. That is why I describe this as a generational choice. It is surely true that the defence spending must go back to levels last seen during the Cold War. But it is also true that the population must be mobilised in civil defence and formal security roles in new and wider ways. The war in Ukraine has already changed the trajectory of the European story. A decade that started with the Covid-19 pandemic has seen its growth and prosperity derailed by the subsequent decoupling from Russia. This isn't just in terms of the cost of living, which was severely hit by the resources shock following the war. The wider outlook for the continent is also one of beleaguered choices between welfare and warfare with no real prospect of an economic revival. It is not just Ukraine that is a frontline state. The Baltics and Scandinavians have that mentality, too. Alliances have been formed such as the 10-nation Joint Expeditionary Force, which stretches from Iceland through the UK to those northern frontline states. Most European countries are on a trajectory to higher government spending, but the reforms in the security mentality are not yet as real as the scale of the challenge that the continent is facing. The retired British general Richard Barrons observed last week that no one was talking about a Russian invasion of the UK as a credible prospect, but he queried the readiness for a more wholistic threat landscape. This includes strengthening the digital sphere in the information age. A society mobilised to take on these challenges is clearly just as vital as strong defences in Finland or elsewhere. For now, the Europeans will seek to eke out as much of a security blanket from the US as they can feasibly obtain. That is why the cast at the White House on Monday was not just Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy but also included Mr Starmer, Mr Macron, Mr Merz, Mr Stubb, plus Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. It would be a fool's paradise, however, to not see the writing on the wall. When the Signal chat involving American leaders was leaked during Washington's confrontation with Yemen's Houthis, Vice President JD Vance was shown asking why the US was bailing out European security. The intervention across the Red Sea was quickly curtailed. France has long argued that at least two thirds of the coming European military build-up should be manufactured at home. Vulnerabilities of ordering from the US include long lead times and a de-prioritisation of the European inventory rebuild in areas such as ammunition. Other European countries openly push for the high-capability requirements on offer from the US. This pushes the longer-term restructuring of the continent's defence industries into the long grass. So while orders are flowing from a top-line increase in defence budgets, it is hard to shake the questions around adequacy. Not only is the spending rising as fast as pledged but also can Europe become strong enough, faster? The answer to that question won't be found in this week's trip to Washington.

United Kingdom (UK) Boosts African Mining Investments in Lead-Up to African Mining Week (AMW) 2025
United Kingdom (UK) Boosts African Mining Investments in Lead-Up to African Mining Week (AMW) 2025

Zawya

time7 hours ago

  • Zawya

United Kingdom (UK) Boosts African Mining Investments in Lead-Up to African Mining Week (AMW) 2025

The United Kingdom (UK) is increasing its strategic investments in African mining to secure a reliable supply of both critical and traditional minerals essential for the energy transition and the Fourth Industrial Revolution. Home to 30% of the world's critical minerals, Africa features significant opportunities for UK-based financiers and mining companies. Increased investments are expected to fuel both UK mineral security and African development. The upcoming African Mining Week (AMW) conference will feature the European Partnerships in African Mining: A mutually Beneficial Future Roundtable, connecting European and UK investors with prospects across Africa. The event will highlight UK-backed projects that support Africa's ambitions to expand mineral production and value addition. Across the continent, UK-based mining companies are expanding their footprint, targeting greater production in both producing and emerging markets. Notably, Blencowe Resources ( is progressing the Orom-Cross Graphite Project in Uganda. In August 2025, the firm signed a five-year offtake agreement with Perpetuus Advanced Materials Limited to supply the UK amid the kingdom's growing graphite demand. The deal follows the project's $1.5 million funding boost through an ongoing partnership with the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation. Similarly, UK's Kore Potash ( is bringing $2.2 billion in investments into the Republic of Congo through a strategic partnership with Swiss investor OWI-RAMS GMBH. The funding is aimed at advancing the Kola Potash Project. In late July, the British Geological Survey also partnered with Zambia's Ministry of Mines and Mineral Development to publish a comprehensive study mapping the country's critical mineral prospects. The report ( highlights investment opportunities for UK firms and aims to increase the flow of UK investments within Africa's second-largest copper producer. Gemfields ( is also expanding its operations in ruby mining across Zambia and Mozambique as well as gemstone investments in Ethiopia and Madagascar. In June 2025, the company raised $30 million through a share placement to fund these developments. Other UK companies including Xtract Resources and Endeavour Mining continue to grow their presence in Senegal, Ivory Coast and Zambia. Through the British International Investment (BII), the UK continues to expand its footprint across Africa's critical sectors, including mining. The BII's investments in African companies surged by 40% in 2024, reaching £1.09 billion up from £725 million in 2023. AMW will build on the UK's growing investment pipeline in African mining, connecting UK and African mining stakeholders and facilitating strategic partnerships and industry-changing deal signings. Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Energy Capital&Power.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store