The European Central Bank raised rates this week, and the Bank of Japan did too.
The Bank of England went the other way and sat still. It is leaning on a peace deal far away to cool prices at home.
A Hold That's Really A Wait
On Thursday, the bank left its rate at 3.75%. That is the rate it charges other banks.
It shapes what you pay on a home loan and what you earn on savings. So the hold touches almost everyone.
The rate has sat at 3.75% for a while now. The vote to keep it there was 7-2.
The two holdouts were Megan Greene and Huw Pill. They wanted to push rates up a bit.
Governor Andrew Bailey calls this an active hold. In plain terms, he is keeping his foot off the gas.
He thinks the road ahead may clear on its own, so he would rather wait than move.
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The Iran Connection
A truce between the US and Iran could reopen the Strait of Hormuz. That would let more oil flow and ease energy prices.
Cheaper energy matters a lot to Britain, which leans hard on gas it buys from abroad. So falling prices would do some of the bank's work for it.
Bailey is not ready to call it a win, though. He warned that the past four months of high energy costs are already in the pipeline.
Lower oil would still be a relief. It feeds into almost every price, from gas at the pump to food on the shelf.
A calmer Middle East would help on both fronts. That is the outcome the bank is hoping for.
The Outlier
The hold leaves the UK as the odd one out. Even the new US Fed may push rates up later this year.
Most big central banks are leaning the same way. The Bank of England is the one holding back.
The bank sees inflation above 3.25% by the end of the year. That beats May's 2.8%, but it is milder than the 3.6% it feared in April.
Growth looks a touch better too, near 0.2% a quarter. That tops the old pace of 0.1%, even if it is hardly a boom.
UK prices have run hot for years. Russia's war in Ukraine once pushed inflation above 11% back in 2022.
Those shocks still shape how the bank thinks. It would rather move slowly than risk a new spike.
What To Watch
The whole bet rests on cheaper oil and gas showing up. If the Strait reopens and energy keeps falling, the hold will look smart.
If it does not, the two members who wanted a hike will have the stronger case. The next reading on prices will test that bet.
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