By Jonathan Cable
LONDON (Reuters) - The Bank of England is likely to keep borrowing costs steady on Jan. 30, the eve of Britain's departure from the European Union, but there is a significant chance it will opt to trim Bank Rate following a slew of weak data, a Reuters poll found.
At the December meeting of the Monetary Policy Committee two of its nine members voted for a 25 basis point cut to 0.50% and since then several others -- including Governor Mark Carney -- have made dovish comments.
On Wednesday official data showed inflation fell to a more than three-year low of just 1.3% in December, below all expectations in a separate Reuters poll and a far cry from the Bank's 2% target, fuelling expectations of an imminent interest rate cut.
"In recent days there has been heightened focus on the possibility that the Bank of England might opt to cut the 0.75% Bank rate over the coming months and perhaps even as soon as January 30," said Victoria Clarke at Investec.
This month's meeting will be Carney's last, however, and as he has been criticized in the past for making political comments regarding Brexit he may be reluctant for his parting shot to be voting for a reduction in Bank Rate.
While 60 of 68 respondents in the Jan. 13-16 poll said there would be no change in policy this month they gave a median 35% chance the MPC will cut rates.
"We changed our call to a 25 basis point January rate cut just over a month ago in early December, and that call has clearly gained a lot of traction over recent weeks," said George Buckley at Nomura.
Sterling
HARD STANCE
Britain will part ways with the EU at the end of this month, well over three years since Britons voted to leave, but will remain bound by all the bloc's rules until the end of 2020 under an agreed transition phase aimed at smoothing its exit.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson insists he will not ask for more time to secure a trade deal, even as European leaders, including EU Commission President Ursula Von der Leyen, cast doubt on the feasibility of reaching agreement in 11 months.
With time short, the median probability of a disorderly Brexit, when no deal on their future relationship is agreed between the two sides, nudged up to 20% in the latest Reuters poll from 15% given last month.
"This risk increases with the obsession of Johnson to refuse any extension of the transition period," Jean Louis Mourier at Aurel BGC said of the chance of a so-called hard Brexit.
Before and since the June 2016 referendum economists have warned that the decision to leave the EU would hurt the British economy, and although a feared recession never materialised, growth has slowed.
The economy will expand just 1.1% this year as firms and consumers remain cautious amid the uncertainty surrounding Brexit, but accelerate to 1.5% next year after the situation is clarified, the median of nearly 90 economists polled showed.
There is just a 20% likelihood of a recession this year and a 25% likelihood of one in the next two years, down from the 25% and 30% chances given in a December poll.