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Business Today
Business live
Bank of England expected to leave interest rates on hold despite falling inflation
Live  
Bank of England expected to leave interest rates on hold despite falling inflation
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news
Headlines
US  
Rates unchanged but Federal Reserve signals three cuts this year
Rates unchanged but Federal Reserve signals three cuts this year
Reddit  
Shares priced at $34 in largest IPO by social media company in years
Renting  
Average monthly UK rent up 9% – the highest annual increase recorded
Work  
EU to crack down on unpaid internships ‘exploiting despair of young people’
Inflation  
UK rate falls to 3.4% in February as food price rises slow
Tax  
HMRC halts plan to close helpline for six months a year
World Bank  
Report finds imminent risk of catastrophic famine in Gaza Strip
Norton  
Former owner ‘should have been jailed over pension fraud’ – Pensions Ombudsman chair
Google  
Firm fined €250m in France for breaching intellectual property deal
Technology  
Microsoft hires DeepMind co-founder to lead new AI division
Transport  
Drivers on London Underground and 16 rail firms to strike in April and May
Food & drink  
Greggs IT glitch leaves stores unable to accept payments
Luxury goods  
Gucci owner Kering issues profit warning after China sales slump
Air transport  
Dutch airline KLM misled customers with vague green claims, court rules
Fossil fuels  
World’s top bosses deride efforts to move away from oil and gas
Today's agenda
It’s a busy day for central bankers, with the Bank of England expected to leave UK interest rates at a 16-year high at noon.

Despite inflation dropping to a two-and-a-half-year low on Wednesday, economists predict BoE policymakers will choose to leave the bank rate at 5.25%. That would fail to bring any relief to UK borrowers, and maintain the pressure on the economy from higher borrowing costs.

According to the money markets this morning, ‘no change’ offers a 95% chance while there’s just a 5% possibility of a quarter-point cut (lowering rates to 5%). The Bank has made clear in recent weeks it wants to see further evidence that inflationary pressures are falling'; economists will scrutinise the minutes of this week’s meeting for any hints as to how long policy should remain restrictive.

At last month’s meeting, the Bank’s nine policymakers split three ways – six voted to hold, two wanted a rise, and one a cut. That split could change today, as the MPC weighs up the risks of tightening for too long, versus easing too early.


The Bank will surely have appreciated yesterday’s drop in CPI inflation to 3.4%, nearer to its 2% target. But it will also have noted that services inflation – a guide to domestic inflationary pressures – was 6.1%. That could be too high for comfort, for the BoE.

The MPC will also want to see signs that wage pressures are easing. Not cutting has its risks, though. Monetary policy operates with a lag – meaning interest rate changes are like turning the rudder on a supertanker, not the steering wheel of a racing car.

Last month, the Bank’s former chief economist, Andy Haldane, warned that keeping rates high could ‘crush the economy’. Haldane’s successor, Huw Pill, has likened the Bank’s challenge to a trip on Table Mountain. Rates may have reached their highest levels, but there’s more of a plateau to travel before they start falling….

If not a cut now, then when? Many City analysts predict the BoE will start cutting rates by this summer, when inflation could have dropped all the way back to its 2% target. Modupe Adegbembo, economist at Jefferies, expects the MPC to keep rates on hold at 5.25% and begin cutting in August. 'Given the resilience of the economy, we think the BoE will cut rates steadily, pencilling in 75bp of cuts across this year leaving the bank rate at 4.50% by end-2024.'

Stock markets are in a buoyant mood today after America’s central bank stuck with its forecast that US rates will be lowered by three-quarters of a percentage point this year. Last night, the Federal Reserve left interest rates on hold, but also signalled it still expects to cut rates three times this year. That cheered Wall Street, driving the Dow Jones industrial average up by 1% last night. Today, Japan’s Nikkei index has jumped 2% to a new all-time closing high.

The agenda
• 
7am GMT: UK public finances
• 8am GMT: Taiwan’s interest rate decision
• 8.30am GMT: Switzerland’s interest rate decision
• 9am GMT: Norway’s interest rate decision
• 9am GMT: Eurozone ‘flash’ PMI survey of business activity for March
• 9.30am GMT: UK ‘flash’ PMI of business activity for March
• Noon GMT: Bank of England interest rate decision
• 12.30pm GMT: US weekly jobless figures 

We’ll be tracking all the main events throughout the day ...
Opinion
Profile  
New Microsoft AI boss, Mustafa Suleyman
New Microsoft AI boss, Mustafa Suleyman
Editorial  
Labour’s economic plans: a response too small for the challenge the UK faces
Want to get rich quick? Business influencers have some new advice – and it’s terrible
Explainer  
UK inflation: which goods and services have changed most in price?
Analysis  
The fight against inflation is being won – but when will interest rates be cut?
Media
Tim Davie  
BBC boss defends broadcaster’s impartiality amid ‘storms of social media’
BBC boss defends broadcaster’s impartiality amid ‘storms of social media’
Prince Harry  
Rupert Murdoch turned ‘blind eye’ to wrongdoing, lawyers allege
Spotlight
Rachel Reeves is staking it all on economic growth. So where’s her plan to achieve it?
Rachel Reeves is staking it all on economic growth. So where’s her plan to achieve it?
Promising to reform the planning system, boost investment and improve skills is all very well, but the detail is missing, says Guardian economics editor Larry Elliott
Popular on business
PwC chairman refuses to share tax leaks scandal investigation with Australian parliament
PwC chairman refuses to share tax leaks scandal investigation with Australian parliament
UK inflation falls to 3.4%, but rents rise at record pace; HMRC halts plans to turn off tax helpline over summer – as it happened
Emissions connected to top oil and gas firms may cause millions of heat deaths by 2100, study finds
Tesco to spend £8m changing Clubcard logo after losing case to Lidl
Retailers who break new smoking ban face on-the-spot fines in UK
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