The British Pound (GBP) trades slightly firmer against the Japanese Yen (JPY) on Thursday after the Bank of England (BoE) decided to keep interest rates unchanged at 4%, in line with market expectations. At the time of writing, GBP/JPY is trading around 201.18, rebounding from a knee-jerk low of 200.65 seen immediately after the monetary policy announcement.
The BoE’s 5-4 vote revealed a close split within the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), with four members favoring a 25 basis-point (bps) rate cut. Policymakers noted that inflationary pressures continue to ease, supported by slower wage growth and signs of weaker demand. Headline CPI stood at 3.8% in September, and the central bank expects inflation to fall to around 3% early next year, before returning toward the 2% target in 2027
Despite a dovish tilt, the BoE emphasized that any future rate cuts would be “gradual and data-dependent.” The central bank’s latest forecasts point to subdued Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth through the end of the year, with household spending restrained by high borrowing costs and an elevated saving ratio. According to the BoE’s November Monetary Policy Report, market pricing now implies the Bank Rate will decline to around 3.5% in the second half of 2026.
Speaking at the post-meeting press conference, BoE Governor Andrew Bailey said the central bank is likely to remain on a “gradual downward path” for interest rates, reaffirming that policy will stay restrictive for some time to ensure inflation returns sustainably to target. Bailey noted that economic activity remains below potential and the labor market is clearly slowing, with firms hiring less and employment subdued.
He cautioned, however, that inflation could remain sticky, emphasizing that policymakers need to see the downward path in price pressure become more established before considering further rate cuts. Bailey added that the Committee reassesses how restrictive policy is at each meeting, with no fixed view on the neutral rate.
The policy contrast between the Bank of England and the Bank of Japan (BoJ) remains a key driver for the pair. While the BoE signaled that interest rates are likely to move lower gradually through 2026 as inflation slows, the BoJ kept its policy rate unchanged at 0.50% last week but hinted that further tightening could be considered if inflation and wage growth strengthen. This policy gap continues to support the Pound’s relative resilience against the Yen in the near term.
(This story was corrected on November 6 at 13:36 GMT to fix the date in the first paragraph. It’s Thursday, not Wednesday.)