By William Schomberg
LONDON (Reuters) - The Bank of England, once widely expected to start weaning Britain off near-zero interest rates this month, now looks set to signal no rise in borrowing costs until the middle of next year.
The BoE kept rates at 0.5 percent -- their level since the depths of the financial crisis in 2009 -- at its monthly policy meeting which ended on Thursday, in line with every forecast in a Reuters poll of 54 economists.
More attention will be paid to economic projections the Bank is due to publish on Nov. 12, which will reflect clouds that have gathered over Britain's fast-recovering economy since the BoE made its last quarterly forecasts in August.
A combination of weak inflation that could fall below 1 percent soon, still-feeble wage growth and the risk of a return to recession in the euro zone, has already prompted some of the Bank's top officials to say they are not ready to start returning to more normal monetary policy.
A cut in the Bank's inflation and growth expectations next week would probably encourage financial markets to add to their bets that there will be no rate hike until mid-2015 -- after Britain's parliamentary election in May -- or possibly later.
Alan Clarke, an economist at Scotiabank, predicted the BoE would cut its forecast for inflation in two years' time to 1.7 percent from 1.8 percent, below the Bank's 2 percent target.
"If we are right about this projection, then the market will probably conclude that the first rate hike is not likely until late 2015," he said in an email to clients.
By contrast, Simon Wells at HSBC said that, while the Bank might chop its short-term inflation forecast, it could nudge up its medium-term inflation projections to reflect how continued low interest rates are likely to keep growth humming.
"In this sense we do not expect a resoundingly dovish report," he said in a research note.
Economists predict only a modest downgrade to the BoE's August growth forecasts, which at 3.5 percent for this year and 3.0 percent for 2015 are more bullish than most analysts expect.
Britain's economy has outpaced its peers in the Group of Seven industrialized nations club this year, finally bouncing back from years of stagnation after the financial crisis.
It is showing signs of a slowdown in the final months of this year but, so far, it looks like the slump in the euro zone has not had a major impact.
Data on Thursday showed industrial output picked up in September, helped by a rebound in oil and car production that had been hit by shutdowns in August. Car sales leapt 14 percent in October although an industry group suggested it expected a slowing of growth soon.
CHANGING TONE
At a news conference also on Nov. 12, Governor Mark Carney will probably strike a different tone from a speech he gave in June when he surprised investors by warning that rates could rise sooner than they were expecting.
Others at the BoE have also had to adapt their message on when rates might rise as the economic outlook has changed.
The Bank's chief economist, Andrew Haldane, said in October that he was gloomier than just a few months earlier, in part because of problems in Europe but also because of the slump in living standards for many Britons.
The Bank has put wage growth at the centre of its thinking on when to raise rates and so far there have been only incipient signs of a recovery in pay.
Only two of the Monetary Policy Committee's nine members have voted to raise rates so far and there are no signs that any of their colleagues are likely to join them any time soon.
"Indeed there is perhaps more of a risk of one of the hawks taking off their vote to raise rates," economists at Bank of America Merrill Lynch said in a report this week.
(Additional reporting by Andy Bruce and Costas Pitas; Editing by Susan Fenton)