Finance

Bank of England to sit tight as Middle East conflict turns up inflation heat

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on March 19, 2026

3 min read

· Last updated: April 1, 2026

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Bank of England to sit tight as Middle East conflict turns up inflation heat
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LONDON, March 19 (Reuters) - The Bank of England on Thursday looks set to delay an interest rate cut that seemed a sure bet before the war in the Middle East, and it will probably sound vague about

Bank of England to Hold Rates as Middle East Conflict Raises Inflation Risks

Bank of England’s Interest Rate Decision Amid Geopolitical Tensions

LONDON, March 19 (Reuters) - The Bank of England on Thursday looks set to delay an interest rate cut that seemed a sure bet before the war in the Middle East, and it will probably sound vague about its next steps while it waits to see the extent of the inflationary shock.

The BoE has cut borrowing costs more slowly than the European Central Bank since 2024 because of its worries about Britain's stubbornly stronger price pressures.

Just when it looked like British inflation was going to drop to the BoE's target of 2% and stay there, the jump in oil and gas prices threatens to push it back up to 3% or higher.

Investor Sentiment and Economic Outlook

INVESTORS RETHINK THE OUTLOOK

That is still a far cry from the peak of 11.1% in 2022 after Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine caused a much bigger spike in energy prices.

But investors have ditched bets that the BoE would cut rates twice this year. On Wednesday, they were pricing the chance of a hike by November as a strong probability.

Most economists think a pause in the BoE's run of rate cuts is more likely than a full U-turn by the Monetary Policy Committee given the fragile state of the UK economy.

Expert Opinions and Labour Market Data

"We see a high hurdle for hikes," James Moberly, senior UK economist at Goldman Sachs, said. "Unlike in 2022, the starting point for monetary policy is restrictive and the MPC faces a trade-off given that the unemployment rate is already elevated."

Britain's jobless rate rose to 5.2% in late 2025, its highest in nearly five years, but wage growth of 4.2% remains too strong for many BoE officials' liking.

The MPC will have had an early view of new labour market data due for publication at 0700 GMT on Thursday.

Moberly said he expected the BoE would cut interest rates in July, assuming the disruption to shipping in the Strait of Hormuz is resolved soon.

Global Central Banks and Policy Responses

Other major central banks meeting this week, including the ECB on Thursday, are also likely to tread warily due to the uncertainty caused by the war.

Monetary Policy Committee’s Expected Decision

7-2 VOTE FOR A PAUSE SEEN AS MOST LIKELY

A Reuters poll of economists pointed to a 7-2 vote by the MPC's nine members to keep Bank Rate on hold at 3.75% when the committee's March decision is announced at 1200 GMT.

Before the conflict, Governor Andrew Bailey - who has been the swing voter in the MPC's last three decisions - said he viewed a March rate cut as "a genuinely open question".

With no press conference scheduled after the announcement and no new economic forecasts due to be published, investors will study individual committee members' comments to get a sense of any changes in their views.

Analysts expect that most will not send clear signals about what they might do next and that the MPC statement will drop recent guidance that rates are likely to fall further.

(Writing by William Schomberg; Editing by Hugh Lawson and Catherine Evans)

Key Takeaways

  • Middle East conflict-driven energy shocks are eroding confidence in near‑term rate cuts, keeping inflation elevated above the 2% target (OBR, Oxford Economics)
  • Major banks like UBS, StanChart and Morgan Stanley have revised rate‑cut timelines, pushing them into the second quarter amid persistent inflation risks
  • If energy prices stay elevated, models suggest inflation could rise by up to 0.7 percentage points, potentially prompting the BoE to raise rates above 4% rather than cut

References

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is the Bank of England delaying interest rate cuts?
The Bank of England is delaying rate cuts due to rising UK inflation triggered by higher oil and gas prices following the Middle East conflict.
How has the Middle East conflict affected UK inflation?
The conflict has caused a surge in energy prices, which threatens to push UK inflation back up to 3% or higher, hindering the BoE's plans.
What is the next step for the Bank of England's monetary policy?
The BoE is expected to keep rates steady and be vague about future moves while monitoring new economic data and the extent of the inflationary shock.
How are investors reacting to the Bank of England's current stance?
Investors have pulled back on bets for multiple rate cuts this year and now see a pause, or even a potential rate hike, as possible.
What vote outcome is expected from the Monetary Policy Committee?
A Reuters poll predicts a 7-2 vote by the MPC to keep the Bank Rate unchanged at 3.75% in March.

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