PREMIUMFeb 5, 2026

UK Signal — BoE Split Hold at 3.75% (Feb 5, 2026): A Closer Call Than It Looks

The Bank of England held Bank Rate at 3.75% by a 5–4 vote, with four members preferring a cut to 3.50%. The direction of travel is toward easing, but the committee is signaling the pace will stay controlled and conditional.

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UK Signal — BoE Split Hold at 3.75% (Feb 5, 2026): A Closer Call Than It Looks
Image: AI-generated illustration

The Bank of England held Bank Rate at 3.75% on February 5, 2026, but the vote split 5–4, with four members preferring a cut to 3.50%. The committee’s guidance keeps the direction clear (gradual easing), while emphasizing that the pace will remain controlled and conditional.

Key Points (From The Summary)

  • Decision: Bank Rate maintained at 3.75%.
  • Vote split: 5–4; four members preferred a 25bp reduction.
  • Inflation path: inflation expected to fall further, to around target from April.
  • Guidance: if the economy evolves as expected, policy is likely to be reduced further gradually.
  • Constraint: policy still needs to remain restrictive sufficiently long to keep inflation low.

Westbridge Read-Through

The market-facing signal is the split vote: the committee is closer to easing than the headline “hold” suggests. But a close vote also signals the BOE is highly sensitive to a re-acceleration in services inflation or wages. In practice, expect a cautious easing path unless the labor and services data cool cleanly.

For UK assets, the key trade is between domestic disinflation progress (bullish for gilts) and growth fragility (bearish for cyclicals, supportive for defensives). Sterling risk tends to express through relative rates expectations and external shocks, especially energy-linked moves.

Signals & Watchlist

  • Pay growth: confirmation of easing wage pressure is the unlock for faster cuts.
  • Services inflation: the persistence check after headline inflation improves.
  • Household stress: arrears and refinancing conditions are the transmission channel.
  • Energy pass-through: any renewed energy shock quickly tightens real incomes.

Sources

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