Stock Market News
Bank of England leaves rates unchanged
04-03-2010 11:46
| Add To Google +1 | Tweet |
The Bank of England has held interest rates at 0.5% and taken no further action on quantitative easing (QE) amid conflicting signals over the state of the UK economy.
The Bank decided not to extend its QE programme past £200bn last month and has maintained that position today.
Bank of England governor Mervyn King last month hinted the UK's quantitative easing programme may restart again if the UK economy takes another downturn. However, recent data showing the economy grew by 0.3% in the fourth quarter of 2009 rather than the 1% rise initially recorded may have deterred policy makers from extending the programme.
Other more specialised economic data has been more mixed.
Figures yesterday showed that activity in the services sector, which dominates the UK economy, reached a three-year high in February, but the construction sector contracted.
Britain's manufacturing industry appears to be enjoying a strong first quarter as data revealed growth remained steady at a 15-year high in February.
'Recent indications that economic activity bounced back relatively well in February after taking a significant weather-related hit in January diluted the case for quantitative easing to be revived,' said Howard Archer, chief UK and European economist at the analyst group IHS Global Insight.
However, he said he would not rule out further quantitative easing given the difficulties in the face of economic recovery.
'We expect the Bank of England to keep interest rates down at 0.50% through 2010 given likely persistent concerns about the strength and sustainability of the recovery,' he said.
'The economy seems destined to go through many more twists and turns over the coming months.'
The Bank decided not to extend its QE programme past £200bn last month and has maintained that position today.
Bank of England governor Mervyn King last month hinted the UK's quantitative easing programme may restart again if the UK economy takes another downturn. However, recent data showing the economy grew by 0.3% in the fourth quarter of 2009 rather than the 1% rise initially recorded may have deterred policy makers from extending the programme.
Other more specialised economic data has been more mixed.
Figures yesterday showed that activity in the services sector, which dominates the UK economy, reached a three-year high in February, but the construction sector contracted.
Britain's manufacturing industry appears to be enjoying a strong first quarter as data revealed growth remained steady at a 15-year high in February.
'Recent indications that economic activity bounced back relatively well in February after taking a significant weather-related hit in January diluted the case for quantitative easing to be revived,' said Howard Archer, chief UK and European economist at the analyst group IHS Global Insight.
However, he said he would not rule out further quantitative easing given the difficulties in the face of economic recovery.
'We expect the Bank of England to keep interest rates down at 0.50% through 2010 given likely persistent concerns about the strength and sustainability of the recovery,' he said.
'The economy seems destined to go through many more twists and turns over the coming months.'
| Related share prices |
|---|
Stock News is provided by Digital Look Corporate Solutions from Sharecast news. Please read the terms and conditions of useage of this data. Republication or redistribution of content, including by caching, framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Digital Look Ltd.
Get a free widget for your website with our latest headlines.
You can now add our live prices and new headlines to your website.The news widget features quotes for Oil prices, spot Gold price and Indices plus a choice of news channel for healines.
Top Shares pages
- Share price quotes
- Share charts
- Share watch list
- Company Results Calendar
- UK 100 Shares
- Stock market news
- Company news
- Share tips
- A-Z company search
More share features
POPULAR Share Prices
- Lloyds share price
- HSBC share price
- Barclays share price
- Prudential share price
- Diageo share price
- BP share price
- Vodafone share price
- British Airways share price
- Centrica share price
- Tesco share price
- National Grid share price
- RBS share price
- GSK share price
- Marks and Spencer
- Rolls Royce share price
- Banco Santander price
- Rio Tinto share price
- Amec Share price
- Corac share price
- Lookers share price
- Telecom plus share price
- Kier share price
- Punch taverns price
- Blinkx share price
- Tan share price
- Yell share price
- Rsa share price
- Pendragon share price
- Logica share price
- Bat share price
- Sky share price
- Kingfisher share price
- Dragon Oil share price
- Desire Petroleum share price
- RRL share price
- BPC share price
- VOG share price
- SAR share price


Prices

