Business

Bank of England eyes negative interest rates

UK economy is battered by the coronavirus impact and Brexit headwinds

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 19 Sep 2020 10:00AM

Bank of England eyes negative interest rates
Bank of England in its minutes says the economy outlook for the UK remains unusually uncertain. – AFP pic, September 19, 2020

LONDON – The Bank of England (BoE) on Thursday gave its strongest hint yet that negative interest rates could be on the way as the UK economy battles against coronavirus and Brexit headwinds.

Following a regular policy meeting, the BoE led by governor Andrew Bailey left its key interest rate at a record low of 0.1% amid low inflation and rising unemployment caused by Covid-19 fallout.

The central bank also maintained its cash stimulus, or quantitative easing supporting the economy, at £745 billion (RM3.9 trillion), the minutes of its latest meeting showed.

Markets expect the QE amount to increase before the end of the year.

“The outlook for the economy remains unusually uncertain,” the BoE minutes stated, triggering fresh falls in the pound.

Sterling dropped 0.7% against the dollar “after the Bank of England delivered a dovish statement which included overt references to introducing negative rates”, said Neil Wilson, chief market analyst at Markets.com.

The pound, which later recovered most of the losses, had already come under heavy selling pressure this month from the possibility that Britain and the European Union would fail to strike a post-Brexit trade deal.

As well as the pandemic, Britain’s future trading position with the EU is firmly in the BoE’s sights.

‘Exploring negative rate’

“The path of growth and inflation will depend on the evolution of the pandemic and measures taken to protect public health, as well as the nature of, and transition to, the new trading arrangements between the European Union and the United Kingdom,” the minutes stated.

“It will also depend on the responses of households, businesses and financial markets to these developments.”

The BoE said it was exploring “how a negative Bank Rate could be implemented effectively, should the outlook for inflation and output warrant it”.

The central bank said it would begin “structured engagement on the operational considerations” in the fourth quarter.

A negative interest rate would likely see retail banks further cutting their own borrowing costs, adding more pain to savers while boosting borrowers.

Jobs, inflation fears

The BoE update came after the Federal Reserve on Wednesday pledged to keep boosting the US economy with low rates to help recover millions of American jobs lost in the pandemic.

European Central Bank president Christine Lagarde is meanwhile urging governments to support central bank efforts with fiscal spending.

Although the world economy is bouncing back from the lockdowns that devastated economic activity earlier this year, several nations are grappling with a renewed rise in coronavirus infections, slowing the financial recovery.

The BoE meanwhile on Thursday ruled out tightening interest rates “until there is clear evidence that significant progress is being made in eliminating spare capacity and achieving the 2.0% inflation target sustainably”.

Britain is far from achieving either goal, having fallen into its deepest recession on record following virus lockdown and with the country’s inflation rate at a five-year low at 0.2%.

Should Britain suffer deflation, or falling prices threatening also other nations, the risk is of further job losses at a time when UK companies are shedding hundreds of thousands of positions on virus fallout.

British unemployment is set to surge in the months ahead as the government ends in October its furlough scheme that has been paying the bulk of wages for millions of workers.

“It looks like Bailey is prepared to go big and fast if there is an unemployment crisis once the furlough scheme ends,” added analyst Wilson.

“For the time being he is keeping his powder dry.” – AFP, September 19, 2020

Related News

World / 3y

AFP journalist killed in rocket attack in Eastern Ukraine

Business / 3y

UK economy rebounds after swerving recession

World / 3y

Turkiye-Syria quake deaths to top 50,000: UN relief chief

Business / 3y

Bank of England delivers biggest rate hike in 33 years

Business / 3y

BoE widens action on ‘UK financial stability’ fears

Business / 3y

Bank of England announces more market support measures

Spotlight

Malaysia

Johor polls turn into personality contest as PH, BN work to sway voters

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

'My daughter was stabbed 14 to 16 times' - father of student stabbed at school

Malaysia

‘Malaysia’s wealth is enough for every man’s need but not greed’ - Anwar

Malaysia

Female student injured in stabbing incident at Banting school (video)

Sports & Fitness

Ten-man England edge Mexico to set up World Cup quarter-final clash with Norway

Malaysia

'I had no knowledge of alleged political donations linked to Jana Wibawa' - Tengku Zafrul

Malaysia

BN mulls seat swaps in Negeri Sembilan as Tok Mat pushes for election reset

Malaysia

Panther spotted along highway near Tasik Kenyir (video)

Malaysia

Kedah ruler calls for review of Penang lease payments, says current rate no longer reflects fair value

Opinion

When institutions rewrite the rules, we should all be concerned

By Vinod Sekhar

You may be interested

Business

Malaysia smashes economic forecasts as tech trading and tourism boost GDP

Business

US Dollar weakens as softer jobs data and oil decline cool Fed rate hike bets