deVere CEO: Bank of England likely to hold rates today and through year-end

[uns] money growth chart

The Bank of England is expected to leave its benchmark interest rate at 4% when the Monetary Policy Committee meets at 12 noon BST, and the odds of any additional reduction before year-end โ€œappear slim,โ€ predicts the CEO of global financial advisory giantย deVere Group.

Markets have shifted decisively toward the view that Augustโ€™s quarter-point cut will stand as a solitary move for 2025. Headline consumer price growth remains lodged at 3.8%, almost twice the official 2% target.

Core inflation, which excludes food and energy, has eased only marginally. Food costs are rising more than 5% year-on-year, adding to pressure on household budgets.

These readings keep the Bank in a difficult position: inflation is not retreating fast enough to justify easier policy.

Nigel Green, chief executive of deVere Group, says:

โ€œInflation hasnโ€™t fallen in a way that allows policymakers to signal further cuts. The Committee will, we expect, hold the line to reinforce credibility. Markets should expect steady rates into the new year unless thereโ€™s a decisive downward break in the data.โ€

He adds that monetary policy will remain deliberately restrictive despite slower global growth.

โ€œThe US and euro area can move toward looser policy because their price pressures have moderated more convincingly. The UK cannot follow without risking a resurgence in inflation expectations.โ€

The implications stretch across asset classes

Sterling

Nigel Green expects the pound to remain well supported against major currencies through the final quarter.

โ€œRelative yield advantage is back on sterlingโ€™s side,โ€ he notes. โ€œIf the Bank signals that rates stay high while the Federal Reserve and the ECB lean easier, the pound can grind higher against both the dollar and the euro. Volatility will stay elevated, but the underlying bias is toward strength.โ€

UK equities

A higher-for-longer stance favours certain sectors and challenges others.

โ€œCompanies with strong pricing powerโ€”energy producers, utilities, consumer staplesโ€”should continue to attract inflows,โ€ says Nigel Green. โ€œRate-sensitive growth stocks and highly leveraged real estate names face persistent headwinds as borrowing costs remain elevated.โ€

Bonds and gilts

The environment also keeps UK government bond yields appealing to global investors seeking income.

โ€œGilts will retain a premium over many developed-market peers,โ€ Nigel Green explains. โ€œBut investors must focus on real, inflation-adjusted returns. If inflation stays stubborn, the yield advantage narrows.โ€

Property

Residential and commercial property markets will likely stay subdued.

โ€œMortgage costs will remain relatively high into 2026 if the Bank holds rates,โ€ he predicts. โ€œThis limits price growth and keeps refinancing conditions tight.โ€

For international investors, the message is to treat UK-denominated assets as a distinct opportunity set rather than simply following global easing trends.

โ€œCapital that flowed out of the UK earlier in the year on expectations of swift cuts will reassess,โ€ Nigel Green says. โ€œSterling assets offer income and a currency with scope to appreciate if the Bank maintains its stance.โ€

The deVere CEO concludes that the final quarter of 2025 will test how well markets have priced a prolonged plateau in borrowing costs.

โ€œIf the Bank signals an extended pause while the Fed and ECB continue to ease, sterling could push toward the upper end of its recent trading rangeโ€”potentially $1.40 against the dollar and โ‚ฌ1.20 versus the euro by year-end.

โ€œGilt yields are likely to stay firm, supporting income strategies, while UK equities will remain a story of selective strength, with exporters benefiting from a stronger currency and domestic retailers contending with tighter credit.

โ€œUnless inflation shows an unmistakable downward break, policy will stay restrictive well into the first quarter of 2026, shaping every investment decision tied to the UK.โ€

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