BOE Bailey: Markets have been orderly but stressed at times.
Bank of England’s Gov. Bailey is on the wires saying:
- Markets have been orderly but stressed at times.
- The debt market leverage raises questions on vulnerability.
The 10 year yield in the UK rose from a low of around 4.23% on February 26 to a high of 5.20% on May 18 – a gain of 97 basis points. Looking at the US, it yield moved from a low in early March of 3.92% to 4.687% or 76 basis points.
The UK 10 year yield has a sense moved back down to 4.899% currently. The UK stock market is a modest 4.32% in 2026, and near the middle of the trading range. The market seems to have calmed down.
Looking back at recent comments from Gov. Bailey:
Lords Economic Affairs Committee (June 2)
Bailey firmly stated the Bank should not raise its inflation target from 2% to 3%, saying it’s important to give households confidence the BoE can control inflation. He attributed current above-target inflation largely to the Middle East conflict, and warned of a concerning mix of an aging population and rising youth unemployment weighing on the UK economy.
FT Interview (June 1) — Public Sector Pay
Bailey flagged a widening gap between public and private sector wages — 4.8% vs 3.0% in Q1 2026 — and said the BoE is reconsidering how much weight to place on public-sector pay as an inflation signal, after 12 consecutive months of it outpacing private-sector growth.
Reykjavík Speech (May 29)
Bailey said the Bank is in no rush to raise rates while the Iran war outcome remains uncertain and UK growth stays weak. He argued the BoE has already effectively tightened by removing rate cut expectations, and said tolerating above-target inflation is appropriate given the current environment — but that tolerance would fade if second-round effects emerge.
Verdict: Cautiously Dovish
Bailey is leaning dovish but conditionally so. He’s not rushing to hike despite inflation running at 2.8%, frames holding rates as itself a tightening move, and is tolerating above-target inflation as a temporary geopolitical effect. The key risk that could shift him more hawkish is if wage pressures begin feeding more broadly into prices. The next MPC meeting is June 18.
The BOE target rate is curently at 3.75% — held at the April 30 MPC meeting with an 8-1 vote, the one dissenter actually pushing for a hike to 4%.
How the outlook has shifted
Earlier in the year, markets expected the BoE to cut from 3.75% to 3.25% by year-end, with inflation on course to hit the 2% target. The Middle East conflict rewrote that narrative — higher energy prices pushed inflation from 3.0% in February to 3.3% in March, and the BoE’s most optimistic scenario now sees inflation peaking around 3.6% by year-end.
Where consensus sits now
In a Reuters poll of economists, 33 expected the base rate to be unchanged for the rest of 2026, 14 expected at least one hike, and only 15 predicted one or more cuts. Goldman Sachs expects rates left unchanged this year but flagged a low hurdle for the BoE to deliver a couple of hikes over the summer if energy price pressures continue to build.
June 18 meeting
The MPC has maintained a “gradual and careful" approach, warning that renewed inflation pressures — particularly from higher energy prices — could slow or reverse any easing. Markets currently price only a small chance of any move at the June 18 meeting.
Bottom line: The rate cut story that defined early 2026 expectations has effectively been shelved for now. The base case is a hold at 3.75% through summer, with a hike more likely than a cut if Middle East-driven inflation keeps building. Any easing is now pushed toward late 2026 at the earliest, and only if energy prices stabilise and second-round wage effects don’t materialise.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.