H
recent
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Bank of England to make ‘finely balanced decision’ on whether to cut interest rates at midday – business live

about 2 hours ago
A picture


Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.It may not quite be on a knife-edge, but today’s Bank of England decision on interest rates is providing plenty of uncertainty for the markets to chew on.At noon, the Bank’s monetary policy committee will reveal its latest decision on interest rates, which are currently set at 4%.And while the odds are in favour of a hold, the money markets last night indicated there is a one in three chance that base rate will be cut to 3.75% today.

That would be the sixth cut to borrowing costs since August 2024, as the Bank eased back on the restrictive policy imposed to cool inflation.It’s certainly a tricky decision for the Bank.Although still too high, UK inflation was lower than expected in September at 3.8% – perhaps a sign that cost of living pressures are starting to cool.Policymakers will also have noted that Rachel Reeves appeared to prepare the ground for tax rises – which would be disinflationary, and hurt growth - in a rare pre-budget speech this week.

Danni Hewson, head of financial analysis at AJ Bell, says:“It’s possible Rachel Reeves’ surprise press conference on Tuesday was partly a cry for help to the Bank of England.By promising to push down on inflation, she might have been signalling that the Bank didn’t have to wait until after the Budget to cut rates.Whether they do or not is a finely balanced call.A recent slowdown in wage growth could also persuade some of the Bank’s nine interest rates policymakers to vote for a cut.Julien Lafargue, chief market strategist at Barclays Private Bank, explains:“Recent economic indicators - including September’s lower-than-expected inflation, softer wage growth, and signs of slowing activity in Q3 - strengthen the case for the Bank of England to consider a rate cut this month.

However, this would be a very finely balanced decision as the central bank may see the upcoming Autumn Budget as a key missing piece of the puzzle.Should the MPC decide to stay put, a cut in December would still be on the cards in our opinion.”8.30am GMT: Eurozone construction PMI for October9.30am GMT: UK construction PMI for OctoberNoon GMT: Bank of England interest rate decision12.

30pm GMT: Bank of England press conferenceUncertainty over this month’s budget is hurting the economy, UK broadcaster and content creator ITV has warned,ITV told the City this morning that advertising demand has weakened this quarter, with businesses showing “widespread caution” ahead of the budget on 26 November,As a result, it is planning to make £35m of “temporary savings”,Carolyn McCall, ITV’s chief executive, told shareholders: “UK macro data is showing a softening economy, with increased uncertainty in the lead up to the UK Budget which is impacting the wider advertising market, and we are adjusting our costs to match this current reduction in demand,Those cost-adjustments include £20m of savings by moving some programming from this year into 2026.

ITV will also make £15m of non-content savings, through “reduced discretionary spend” and by cutting marketing spending.Speculation about the timing of rate cuts is reaching fever pitch, reports Kathleen Brooks, research director at XTB:Interest rates are expected to remain on hold, and there is only a 24% chance of a rate cut, however there is a whisper, that is getting louder, that the BOE should surprise markets and cut rates today due to the deteriorating economic backdrop, and weaker than expected inflation for September that did not reach the BOE’s expected peak of 4%.We expect the BOE to keep rates on hold on Thursday, since the most prudent course of action is to wait until after the Budget.This is expected to see unprecedented tax rises, which could slow growth and may boost inflation if fuel duty relief is scrapped or if VAT is increased.The effect of any tax increases would be known by the next Monetary Policy Committee meeting in February, so that might be the most prudent time to cut rates, in our opinion.

The market seems to agree; there is a 56% chance of a February rate cut priced in by the swaps market ahead of this BOE meeting.Japanese bank Nomura have predicted the Bank of England will cut rates today.Last Friday, Nomura said they expect “a hawkish cut”, telling clients:We expect the Bank of England to cut rates by 25bp at its 6 November meeting and to remove from its guidance any reference to interest rates being “restrictive” and the need for further cuts.We believe weaker data over the past month support a rate cut, but that there is probably only one voting configuration (5-4) that can deliver it.Swing voters Bailey, Breeden and Ramsden will likely be needed to vote for a cut to get it over the line.

We think a rate cut is a close call (we’d put our probability at just 60%), and note that consensus forecasts and market pricing are for no change in rates.The greatest risk to our November cut view is that the MPC opts to wait for substantially more news published ahead of the December meeting.Today’s decision on interest rates will be taken by the nine members of the Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee.These experts have a range of views about the correct stance of monetary policy, veering from doves who favour lower rates to protect the economy to hawks who want to prioritise the fight against inflation with higher borrowing costs.Two members – Alan Taylor and Swati Dhingra – are certainly in the dovish camp, while Catherine Mann and Megan Greene are on the hawkish end of the table.

That leaves governor Andrew Bailey, chief economist Huw Pill, and deputy governors Sarah Breeden, Dave Ramsden and Clare Lombardelli,The last rate cut, in August, was a 5-4 split – backed by Bailey, Breeden, Dhingra, Ramsden and Taylor (who had initially wanted an even larger reduction),Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy,It may not quite be on a knife-edge, but today’s Bank of England decision on interest rates is providing plenty of uncertainty for the markets to chew on,At noon, the Bank’s monetary policy committee will reveal its latest decision on interest rates, which are currently set at 4%.

And while the odds are in favour of a hold, the money markets last night indicated there is a one in three chance that base rate will be cut to 3,75% today,That would be the sixth cut to borrowing costs since August 2024, as the Bank eased back on the restrictive policy imposed to cool inflation,It’s certainly a tricky decision for the Bank,Although still too high, UK inflation was lower than expected in September at 3.

8% – perhaps a sign that cost of living pressures are starting to cool.Policymakers will also have noted that Rachel Reeves appeared to prepare the ground for tax rises – which would be disinflationary, and hurt growth - in a rare pre-budget speech this week.Danni Hewson, head of financial analysis at AJ Bell, says:“It’s possible Rachel Reeves’ surprise press conference on Tuesday was partly a cry for help to the Bank of England.By promising to push down on inflation, she might have been signalling that the Bank didn’t have to wait until after the Budget to cut rates.Whether they do or not is a finely balanced call.

A recent slowdown in wage growth could also persuade some of the Bank’s nine interest rates policymakers to vote for a cut.Julien Lafargue, chief market strategist at Barclays Private Bank, explains:“Recent economic indicators - including September’s lower-than-expected inflation, softer wage growth, and signs of slowing activity in Q3 - strengthen the case for the Bank of England to consider a rate cut this month.However, this would be a very finely balanced decision as the central bank may see the upcoming Autumn Budget as a key missing piece of the puzzle.Should the MPC decide to stay put, a cut in December would still be on the cards in our opinion.”8.

30am GMT: Eurozone construction PMI for October9.30am GMT: UK construction PMI for OctoberNoon GMT: Bank of England interest rate decision12.30pm GMT: Bank of England press conference
technologySee all
A picture

Apple Watch SE 3 review: the bargain smartwatch for iPhone

Apple’s entry level Watch SE has been updated with almost everything from its excellent mid-range Series 11 but costs about 40% less, making it the bargain of iPhone smartwatches.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.The new Watch SE 3 costs from £219 (€269/$249/A$399), making it one of the cheapest brand-new fully fledged smartwatches available for the iPhone and undercutting the £369 Series 11 and the top-of-the-line £749 Apple Watch Ultra 3

2 days ago
A picture

Experts find flaws in hundreds of tests that check AI safety and effectiveness

Experts have found weaknesses, some serious, in hundreds of tests used to check the safety and effectiveness of new artificial intelligence models being released into the world.Computer scientists from the British government’s AI Security Institute, and experts at universities including Stanford, Berkeley and Oxford, examined more than 440 benchmarks that provide an important safety net.They found flaws that “undermine the validity of the resulting claims”, that “almost all … have weaknesses in at least one area”, and resulting scores might be “irrelevant or even misleading”.Many of the benchmarks are used to evaluate the latest AI models released by the big technology companies, said the study’s lead author, Andrew Bean, a researcher at the Oxford Internet Institute.In the absence of nationwide AI regulation in the UK and US, benchmarks are used to check if new AIs are safe, align to human interests and achieve their claimed capabilities in reasoning, maths and coding

2 days ago
A picture

OpenAI signs $38bn cloud computing deal with Amazon

OpenAI has signed a $38bn (£29bn) deal to use Amazon infrastructure to operate its artificial intelligence products, as part of a more than $1tn spending spree on computing power.The agreement with Amazon Web Services means OpenAI will be able to use AWS datacentres, and the Nvidia chips inside them, immediately.Last week, OpenAI’s chief executive, Sam Altman, said his company had committed to spending $1.4tn on AI infrastructure, amid concerns over the sustainability of the boom in using and building datacentres. These are the central nervous systems of AI tools such as ChatGPT

3 days ago
A picture

Oakley Meta Vanguard review: fantastic AI running glasses linked to Garmin

The Oakley Meta Vanguard are new displayless AI glasses designed for running, cycling and action sports with deep Garmin and Strava integration, which may make them the first smart glasses for sport that actually work.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.They are a replacement for running glasses, open-ear headphones and a head-mounted action cam all in one, and are the latest product of Meta’s partnership with the sunglasses conglomerate EssilorLuxottica, the owner of Ray-Ban, Oakley and many other top brands

3 days ago
A picture

‘History won’t forgive us’ if UK falls behind in quantum computing race, says Tony Blair

Tony Blair has said “history won’t forgive us” if the UK falls behind in the race to harness quantum computing, a frontier technology predicted to trigger the next wave of breakthroughs in everything from drug design to climate modelling.The former British Labour prime minister, whose thinktank and consultancy, the Tony Blair Institute, is backed by tech industry leaders including the Oracle founder, Larry Ellison, warned: “The country risks failing to convert its leadership in quantum research.”In a report calling for a national strategy for quantum computing, Blair and William Hague, a former Conservative party leader, compared the situation to the recent history of artificial intelligence, where the UK was responsible for important research breakthroughs but then ceded power to other countries, including the US, leading to a scramble to build “sovereign” AI capacity.“As we have seen with AI, a strong research and development base is not enough: it is the countries that have the infrastructure and capital for scale that capture technology’s economic and strategic benefits,” they said. “While the UK is home to the second highest number of quantum startups in the world, it lacks the necessary high-risk capital and infrastructure to scale those startups

3 days ago
A picture

In Grok we don’t trust: academics assess Elon Musk’s AI-powered encyclopedia

The eminent British historian Sir Richard Evans produced three expert witness reports for the libel trial involving the Holocaust denier David Irving, studied for a doctorate under the supervision of Theodore Zeldin, succeeded David Cannadine as Regius professor of history at Cambridge (a post endowed by Henry VIII) and supervised theses on Bismarck’s social policy.That was some of what you could learn from Grokipedia, the AI-powered encyclopedia launched last week by the world’s richest person, Elon Musk. The problem was, as Prof Evans discovered when he logged on to check his own entry, all these facts were false.It was part of a choppy start for humanity’s latest attempt to corral the sum of human knowledge or, as Musk put it, create a compendium of “the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth” – all revealed through the magic of his Grok artificial intelligence model.When the multibillionaire switched on Grokipedia on Tuesday, he said it was “better than Wikipedia”, or “Wokepedia” as his supporters call it, reflecting a view that the dominant online encyclopedia often reflects leftwing talking points

3 days ago
sportSee all
A picture

Who is Joe Marler? From hair-raising rugby antics to breakout star of Celebrity Traitors

about 19 hours ago
A picture

Fast-rising Fiji carry a nation’s pride in redemption match with England

about 20 hours ago
A picture

Squad ratings: how much each Australia player can influence the Ashes series | Martin Pegan

about 20 hours ago
A picture

NFL trade deadline: did the bumbling Jets just fleece Jerry Jones and the Cowboys?

about 21 hours ago
A picture

The Spin | Times are bleak for Pakistan cricket but Test game offers hope of salvation

about 24 hours ago
A picture

Mountain bike world champion Kate Courtney: ‘In pushing your edge, you find you’re capable of more’

1 day ago