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J.P. Morgan sees BoE staying on extended pause with next cut in 2027

By Thomson Reuters Mar 17, 2026 | 4:22 AM

March 17 (Reuters) – J.P.Morgan on Tuesday pushed back its forecast for the Bank of England’s next interest rate cut to the first quarter of ​2027, pointing to inflation pressures caused by ‌higher energy prices.

The brokerage had previously expected a 25‑basis-point cut each in April and June.

J.P. Morgan’s forecast shift comes as the ongoing Middle East conflict and the effective closure of the Strait ‌of ​Hormuz lift global energy prices. That ⁠could drive renewed inflation ⁠risks across Europe, prompting several major brokerages to push back their BoE policy trajectory.

Barclays on Monday also forecast no rate cuts this year.

J.P. Morgan said ​the central bank is now likely to enter an “extended pause” as elevated energy costs could potentially delay ⁠the return of BoE’s inflation ⁠target to 2%.

The brokerage lifted its fourth-quarter ​average inflation forecast to 2.9% from 2.2%, warning inflation may ​not normalise until well into 2027.

J.P. Morgan also ‌cut its 2026 UK GDP growth forecast to 0.6% from 0.8%, citing real-income pressure from higher energy bills, which are set to rise sharply in July and ⁠remain elevated into next winter.

The central bank’s next monetary policy meeting is scheduled on Wednesday and traders are betting on ⁠a 98.1% chance ‌for rates to remain unchanged, per ⁠data compiled by LSEG.

“We think the BoE ​will ‌acknowledge that rates are still restrictive at ​this week’s ⁠meeting, and retain a mild easing bias. But the prospect of further easing is likely to be pushed well away from the BoE’s near-term agenda,” the brokerage added.

(Reporting by Rashika Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by Mrigank Dhaniwala ​and Devika Syamnath)