Bank of England ends 2015 with interest rates on hold

The Bank of England has kept interest rates at a half a percent, it announced Thursday in the last monetary policy decision of the 2015.  

Bank of England ends 2015 with interest rates on hold

London: The Bank of England has kept interest rates at a half a percent, it announced Thursday in the last monetary policy decision of the 2015.

The BoE`s Monetary Policy Committee (Mpercent) kept its key rate at 0.5 percent, where it has stood since March 2009, it said in minutes of the latest monthly gathering.

The bank also left unchanged the level of cash stimulus, or quantitative easing, at £375 billion ($565 billion, 516 billion euros).

The rate-setting Mpercent panel "voted by a majority of 8-1 to maintain bank rate at 0.5 percent", the bank said in the minutes.

The news comes as the US Federal Reserve is poised to deliver next week its first interest rate hike in almost a decade, while eurozone monetary policy is moving in the opposite direction.

"The Mpercent`s decision to leave interest rates on hold again on Thursday highlights how the UK is set to tread the middle path between a loosening ECB and tightening US Fed," said Capital Economics economist Scott Bowman.

"Indeed, the Mpercent does not appear to be in any rush to raise rates."

The Federal Reserve is widely expected on December 16 to embark on the first of a long-awaited series of rate hikes, after a stream of upbeat US economic data.

The US bank`s benchmark federal funds rate has been locked near zero for nearly seven years.

In contrast, the European Central Bank had last week cut its key deposit rate by 0.10 percentage points to minus 0.30 percent, while stimulus measures fell short of market expectations.

In Britain, muted inflation and collapsing oil prices mean that there is little prospect of a hike in UK interest rates any time soon, economists say.

"Since its last policy meeting, oil prices have renewed their descent, while inflation developments generally have remained very benign," noted Lloyds economist Adam Chester.

The BoE`s main task is to try and keep 12-month inflation close to a government-set target of 2.0 percent.

The 12-month Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation rate stood at minus 0.1 percent last month, unchanged from September. That matched the rate in April, which was also the lowest level since March 1960.

 

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