ARTIGOS POPULARES

Bank of England (BoE) Governor Andrew Bailey said in comments to CNBC that policymakers have time to assess how higher energy prices may feed through into the United Kingdom (UK) economy, while noting that financial conditions have already tightened.
Key takeaways:
We have time to judge the pass-through of higher energy prices to the UK economy.
UK inflation could still rise to 3.2% later this year.
It is important that energy prices are now not much higher than before the Iran war.
The UK would have hit the inflation target in April or May 2026 were it not for the war.
Financial conditions have tightened, giving the BoE time to evaluate whether it needs to raise the Bank Rate.”
Bailey flags war-driven inflation risks but senses room before next BoE rate move
BoE Governor Bailey’s 7.2/10 FXS Speechtracker score is notably above the historic 4.7/10 baseline, signaling a more hawkish tilt than usual despite the emphasis on patience. References to UK inflation potentially rising to 3.2% later this year and the claim that the inflation target would have been hit by April or May 2026 without the war underscore upside inflation risks that support a firmer stance on GBP.
At the same time, Bailey’s remarks that financial conditions have tightened and that the BoE has time to judge the pass-through of higher energy prices suggest a reluctance to rush into further interest rate hikes. The observation that energy prices are now not much higher than before the Iran war tempers the hawkish tone, implying that while inflation risks remain, the BoE may prefer to wait and assess data before committing to a new tightening cycle, leaving GBP sensitive to incoming inflation and energy market developments.












