
IMF – International Monetary Fund
Central Banks • 11 min
The Bank of England (BoE) sets the tone for the UK economy—and the markets that track it. When the Monetary Policy Committee adjusts Bank Rate or steers its balance sheet, the ripple effects can be swift: sterling can move, gilt yields can reprice, and UK equities often react to shifting growth and inflation expectations.
As a trader, understanding what the BoE is watching—and how policy changes feed through—helps you prepare with clear scenarios rather than chase headlines.
At AvaTrade, we focus on what matters on decision day and beyond: the vote split, guidance in the minutes, and any updates to quantitative tightening.
Map these signals to potential outcomes for GBP pairs (like GBP-USD or EUR-GBP), the UK100, and the gilt curve, then build a plan that fits your risk appetite and timeframe.
The Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) sets Bank Rate and steers asset purchases/sales.
It typically comprises nine members: the Governor, three Deputy Governors, the Bank’s Chief Economist, and four external experts. A non-voting HM Treasury representative attends to provide fiscal context.
The MPC is operationally independent. It aims for 2% CPI inflation over the medium term while supporting sustainable growth and employment within the government’s remit.
When inflation deviates materially and persistently from target, the Governor explains the drivers and the path back to target in an open letter—useful colour for market expectations.
The MPC meets eight times a year. Each decision day usually delivers:
These outputs are the market’s roadmap—watch how guidance and forecasts line up with pricing implied by swaps/futures.
Plan your approach for the next MPC day—track dates in our Economic Calendar, set alerts in the AvaTradeApp, and prep orders in WebTrader.
Bank Rate anchors short-term interest rates across the UK financial system. When the MPC raises Bank Rate, borrowing costs tend to rise and demand cools; when it cuts, financing eases.
For markets, the near-term impact shows up in GBP, short-dated gilts, and rate-sensitive equities.
Trader takeaway: Compare each move (or hold) with what swaps/futures had priced; surprises drive the biggest reactions.
The BoE holds a large stock of gilts from past QE. It is currently shrinking that portfolio through a mix of maturities rolling off and active sales.
The pace and maturity mix matter: faster QT or a tilt toward longer maturities can pressure long-dated gilt prices (lifting yields) and ripple into equity valuations and GBP via relative rate expectations.
Trader takeaway: Watch any change in the 12-month QT target and wording around market functioning—this shapes the gilt curve and UK100 sensitivity.
Beyond the headline, the MPC’s language is the market’s compass. Phrases about persistence of inflation, labour-market slack, services inflation, or data-dependency can make a “hold” feel hawkish or a “hike” sound dovish.
Trader takeaway: Read the vote split and the balance of risks. A rise in dissenting hawks/doves often foreshadows the next move.
The BoE runs a modern, reserves-remuneration framework that keeps overnight rates close to Bank Rate.
You may also see targeted facilities for liquidity management or market functioning—distinct from monetary policy but still relevant for gilt pricing and GBP volatility.
Trader takeaway: If special operations are announced, separate financial-stability tools from policy stance in your scenarios.
Build your BoE playbook—check the date in our Economic Calendar, set alerts for GBP-USD and UK100 in WebTrader, and test entries/exits in a free demo on the AvaTradeApp.
When the BoE tightens the stance (higher-for-longer language, quicker QT), gilt prices typically fall and yields rise.
Looser guidance generally does the opposite. Keep that inverse link in mind as you read the market.
Trade notes: Watch front-end UK rates vs USD/EUR equivalents; the wider the spread shift, the bigger the FX impulse.
Trade notes: A QT tilt towards longer-dated gilt sales can steepen the curve (long yields ↑ more than short).
Trade notes: Map sector exposure—exporters may benefit from GBP weakness even if UK growth slows.
| BoE outcome | GBP | Short gilts | Long gilts | UK100 |
| Hawkish hold (no change, tougher guidance) | ↑ | Yields ↑ | Yields ↑/↗ | Mixed/↓ |
| Dovish hold (no change, softer language) | ↓ | Yields ↓ | Yields ↓/↘ | Mixed/↑ |
| Surprise hike | ↑↑ | Yields ↑↑ | Yields ↑ | ↓ |
| Surprise cut | ↓↓ | Yields ↓↓ | Yields ↓ | ↑ |
(Arrows show typical directional reactions; magnitude depends on how far the decision diverges from pricing.)
Turn the map into a plan—check our Economic Calendar for the next MPC date, set alerts on GBP-USD, EUR-GBP and UK100 in WebTrader, and practise your entries on a free demo in the AvaTradeApp.
What Happened: The BoE kept Bank Rate at 4% and slowed QT to £70bn for the coming year, tilting sales away from long-dated gilts to reduce market strain. Vote split 7–2.
Why It Mattered: A slower, maturity-aware QT path signalled sensitivity to gilt-market functioning.
Traders read this as marginally dovish vs. prior QT pace, but still consistent with a cautious, data-dependent stance. External managers even urged a full halt to active gilt sales, highlighting liquidity risks.
Trader Moves: Align scenarios to the vote split and tenor mix (40/40/20 short/medium/long sales per reporting). Track swaps vs statement language for divergence. Practise entries on a demo before going live.
What Happened: During the LDI-driven gilt turmoil (late Sep–Oct 2022), the BoE conducted temporary, targeted long-dated gilt purchases to restore orderly conditions—a financial-stability tool, not a change in the monetary-policy stance.
What’s New Since: The Bank designed a Contingent Non-Bank Financial Institution Repo Facility (CNRF) to lend against gilts if severe dysfunction returns—a liquidity backstop intended to be used instead of asset purchases where repo lending is effective.
Trader Moves: Separate stability tools from stance. If a facility like CNRF is activated, reassess curve shape and liquidity—but avoid assuming rate-path changes.
What Happened: In two special March meetings, the MPC slashed Bank Rate to 0.1% and launched £200bn of additional asset purchases (gilts and investment-grade corporate bonds), expanding the APF and deploying liquidity tools alongside TFSME and the CTRF.
Why It Mattered: The package aimed to stabilise funding markets and ease financial conditions quickly.
Evidence from the Bank’s research shows gilt yields retraced a significant portion of their surge shortly after the 19 March QE announcement—illustrating how large-scale purchases compress term premia and anchor the curve in stress.
Trader Moves: Track rate-path repricing (front-end) vs QE-driven term-premium moves (long end). On shock days, separate liquidity facilities (e.g., CTRF) from the policy stance to avoid misreading stabilisation tools as guidance changes. Practise execution on a demo before committing capital.
Prepare For Policy Shifts—Follow Our Economic Calendar, Set GBP-USD And UK100 Alerts in WebTrader, and Test Your Set-Ups on a Free Demo Account.
It keeps Bank Rate unchanged; focus on the vote split and guidance—these often drive GBP, gilts, and UK100 more than the headline.
Eight times a year. Use our Economic Calendar to prep scenarios and set price alerts ahead of each decision.
QE adds assets to lower yields and ease conditions; QT lets assets roll off or be sold, tending to lift yields—especially at longer maturities.
Bond prices and yields move inversely. When rates or term premia rise, existing bonds’ fixed coupons are less attractive, so prices drop.