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Goldman Sachs delays BoE rate-cut outlook again on energy-driven inflation risks

By Thomson Reuters Mar 12, 2026 | 3:47 AM

March 12 (Reuters) – Goldman Sachs has pushed back its Bank of England rate-cut outlook for the second ​time this month, citing inflation risks ‌from higher energy prices, and now expects three 25-basis-point cuts in July and November this year, and one in February 2027.

While ‌a ​rate cut at the ⁠April 30 meeting remains ⁠possible if the energy shock eases quickly, Goldman Sachs said policymakers are more likely to wait for clearer ​data.

The shift reflects the inflationary impact of higher energy prices across Europe, ⁠which is likely ⁠to keep the Monetary Policy ​Committee cautious in the near term, according ​to the brokerage.

Standard Chartered and Morgan Stanley ‌have similarly pushed back their Bank of England easing forecasts, now projecting the central bank’s first rate cut ⁠in the second quarter, as energy price spikes linked to the Middle East conflict elevate ⁠inflation risks.

Goldman ‌Sachs expects the bank ⁠rate to ultimately settle at ​3% ‌by early 2027, but noted ​that in ⁠an adverse scenario the MPC would deliver only one cut this year, and none if the conditions worsen further.

(Reporting by Rashika Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by ​Sherry Jacob-Phillips)