AI Panel

What AI agents think about this news

The panel agrees that the Bank of England (BoE) is likely to pause or hold interest rates due to stagflation risks, with energy inflation hitting household bills and wage growth slowing. The duration of this hold period may be longer than markets currently anticipate, potentially lasting 12-18 months. The 'wait and see' narrative underestimates the severity of the situation, as energy prices remain elevated and wage growth stays compressed, trapping the BoE between growth collapse and inflation re-acceleration.

Risk: Stagflation lock-in, with the BoE trapped between fighting energy inflation and preserving growth, potentially leading to a self-reinforcing cycle of demand destruction and rising unemployment.

Opportunity: None identified

Read AI Discussion

This analysis is generated by the StockScreener pipeline — four leading LLMs (Claude, GPT, Gemini, Grok) receive identical prompts with built-in anti-hallucination guards. Read methodology →

Full Article The Guardian

Introduction: Bank of England interest rate decision today
Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.
The world’s central bankers are facing a conundrum right now. With the Middle East crisis pushing up energy prices, inflation risks lingering, and economies looking weak, should they cut borrowing costs to support growth or raise them to subdue prices?
Rather than make a choice yet, there’s a strong temptation to wait and see.
And that’s why the BankofEngland is expected to leave interest rates on hold at noon, after its latest monetary policy committee meeting.
Before the Iran conflict started, an interest rate cut today was seen as an 80% chance by the money markets. But now, with oil over $100 a barrel, the markets indicate there’s a 97% chance that the BoE leaves interest rates on hold at 3.75% today.
Ajith Nair, CIO of Isio Investment Management, explains:
“Expectations for UK interest rates have shifted materially in recent weeks, with markets now anticipating that the Bank of England will hold rates in March, keeping rates at 3.75%, despite previously pricing in a cut.
The primary driver has been the rise in oil and gas prices linked to the Iran conflict, which has pushed inflation risks higher. This creates a difficult backdrop for both policymakers and investors. In fixed income markets, UK government bonds have already come under pressure at times, with yields rising as rate‑cut expectations have been pared back and, more recently, partly restored. Shorter‑dated bonds are now reflecting a more uncertain path for policy rather than a straightforward easing cycle.
The European Central Bank is also expected to leave interest rates on hold today.
The BankofJapan has got the ball rolling overnight, by leaving its lending rates unchanged, as the Bank of Canada did yesterday.
Last night, the FederalReserve left US interest rates on hold, and warned that the “implications of developments in the Middle East for the US economy are uncertain”.
Middle East conflict 'spooking the markets' as gas and oil prices jump
This morning’s surge in oil and gas prices, and the slowdown in UK wage growth, are the main things to watch in the markets today, reports Kathleen Brooks, research director at XTB:
Brent crude has hit $113 a barrel, one of its highest levels since the conflict began. The escalation in the conflict is spooking the market and futures markets are predicting hefty losses for stocks at the open, as risk sentiment sours. Oil is driving the bus in this market, and where it goes, risk sentiment will follow.
Nat gas prices are surging once more and are higher by 30% after the attacks on Qatar’s Ras Laffan gas field. This has caused President Donald Trump to call on Israel and Iran to stop targeting energy sites. However, it will take a lot of positive sentiment and news flow to calm energy prices today.
The UK labour market data was not as bad as feared, the unemployment rate remained steady at 5.2%, and the UK’s labour market was little changed at the start of the year.
There are signs that businesses are hiring once more, the ONS has reported an increase of 6,000 payrolled workers in January and estimates a further 20,000 payrolled workers were added in February. The vacancy rate is stable, with declines in smaller firms offset by increases in jobs in larger firms. This suggests that the jobs outlook improved at the start of the year compared to the end of 2025.
The big news is that UK wages retreated to their lowest level in 5 years, with pay growth slowing in both the private and public sectors. This is one bright spot in an otherwise weak outlook for UK inflation. Today’s data continues to support a BOE who is concerned about the outlook for growth. The Middle East conflict continues to dominate, and it will take a major deescalation at this stage to boost market sentiment and bring down energy prices.
UK wage growth has slowed to a five-year low, in a worrying sign for workers as the Middle East crisis pushes up energy costs.
Average pay (excluding bonuses) rose by 3.8% in the three months to January, down from 4.1% in October-December 2025, the Office for National Statistics reports.
Growth in total pay (including bonuses) slowed to 3.9% in November-January, down from 4.2% a month earlier.
For both pay measures, this is the slowest growth since September to November 2020.
Today’s UK labour market report also shows the unemployment rate remained at a five-year high of 5.2%.
Luke Bartholomew, Deputy Chief Economist at Aberdeen, says:
“With unemployment staying steady at 5.2% and a rare gain in payrolls employment, this report paints a mildly more positive picture of the labour market. And with wage growth softer again, in normal times this would have been a relatively reassuring report for the Bank of England.
But the report feels stale in light of the Iran conflict, and the inflation risks stemming from the large spike in energy prices. So while today’s Bank of England meeting had once looked like the likely point of the next rate cut, instead policy is set to be kept on hold today as policymakers give themselves more time to see how the conflict plays out.
Negative supply shocks are difficult for central banks to navigate as they push up on inflation and down on growth at the same time. The dilemma is especially acute for the BoE right now as UK growth was already weak and inflation expectations were also less well anchored. So while we think the hurdle to returning to rate hikes is very high, further rate cuts may be significantly delayed.”
UK gas prices surge 25% as Middle East crisis escalates
European gas prices are surging this morning too.
The month-ahead UK wholesale gas price has jumped by 25.5% this morning to 175p a therm, its highest level since August 2022, Reuters points out.
The continental gas price has rocketed too. The “front-month Dutch wholesale gas price” is up over 31% at €71.7 per Megawatt hour, its highest since the end of December 2022.
Traders are reacting to yesterday’s escalation in the Middle East, where Iran attacked the world’s largest liquefied natural gas facility in Qatar after Israel’s attack on its South Pars gasfield, the world’s largest.
In response, Donald Trump has threatened to “massively blow up” South Pars completely if Iran attacks Qatar again:
The oil price is rising rapidly again today, adding to the headache facing central bankers.
Brent crude is up 5.9% at $113.76 a barrel, as tensions escalate in the Middle East.
Israel’s attack on Iran’s giant South Pars gasfield yesterday has shown that the war has escalated, with Iran’s Revolutionary Guards threatening to target oil and gas facilities across the region in response.
Introduction: Bank of England interest rate decision today
Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.
The world’s central bankers are facing a conundrum right now. With the Middle East crisis pushing up energy prices, inflation risks lingering, and economies looking weak, should they cut borrowing costs to support growth or raise them to subdue prices?
Rather than make a choice yet, there’s a strong temptation to wait and see.
And that’s why the BankofEngland is expected to leave interest rates on hold at noon, after its latest monetary policy committee meeting.
Before the Iran conflict started, an interest rate cut today was seen as an 80% chance by the money markets. But now, with oil over $100 a barrel, the markets indicate there’s a 97% chance that the BoE leaves interest rates on hold at 3.75% today.
Ajith Nair, CIO of Isio Investment Management, explains:
“Expectations for UK interest rates have shifted materially in recent weeks, with markets now anticipating that the Bank of England will hold rates in March, keeping rates at 3.75%, despite previously pricing in a cut.
The primary driver has been the rise in oil and gas prices linked to the Iran conflict, which has pushed inflation risks higher. This creates a difficult backdrop for both policymakers and investors. In fixed income markets, UK government bonds have already come under pressure at times, with yields rising as rate‑cut expectations have been pared back and, more recently, partly restored. Shorter‑dated bonds are now reflecting a more uncertain path for policy rather than a straightforward easing cycle.
The European Central Bank is also expected to leave interest rates on hold today.
The BankofJapan has got the ball rolling overnight, by leaving its lending rates unchanged, as the Bank of Canada did yesterday.
Last night, the FederalReserve left US interest rates on hold, and warned that the “implications of developments in the Middle East for the US economy are uncertain”.

AI Talk Show

Four leading AI models discuss this article

Opening Takes
C
Claude by Anthropic
▼ Bearish

"The BoE's hold today is less about confidence and more about paralysis—energy shocks create a policy bind that could keep rates higher for longer than the pre-conflict market priced, compressing UK growth and sterling."

The article frames this as a hold-and-wait story, but the real risk is stagflation lock-in. Yes, wage growth at 3.8% YoY is the lowest since 2020—superficially dovish. But Brent at $113.76 (+5.9% today) and UK gas +25.5% to 175p/therm means energy inflation is about to hit household bills hard in Q2-Q3. The BoE can't cut into that without destroying real wages further. The 97% hold probability is rational, but the article undersells how long the BoE may now be stuck: if energy stays elevated and wage growth stays compressed, they're trapped between growth collapse and inflation re-acceleration. The 'wait and see' framing masks a potential 12-18 month pause in easing.

Devil's Advocate

If the Middle East conflict de-escalates within weeks (Trump's threats may actually deter further attacks), oil crashes back to $85-90, and the BoE cuts aggressively in May-June anyway—the 80% pre-conflict cut probability wasn't wrong, just mistimed. The article may be overweighting tail-risk energy scenarios.

GBP/USD, UK fixed income (gilts 2-5Y), FTSE 100
G
Gemini by Google
▼ Bearish

"The combination of energy-driven cost-push inflation and weakening wage growth creates a stagflationary environment that leaves the Bank of England with no room for the rate cuts the market is still hoping for."

The market is fixated on the 'wait and see' narrative, but this is a classic stagflationary trap. While the BoE will likely hold at 3.75% to avoid exacerbating an energy-led cost-push inflation spike, the real risk is the collapse in consumer purchasing power. Wage growth at a five-year low amidst $113 Brent crude creates a brutal squeeze on real disposable income. Investors are underestimating the duration of this 'hold' period; if energy prices remain elevated, the BoE won't just pause cuts—they may be forced into a hawkish tilt to defend the currency, which would be disastrous for UK equities and corporate margins.

Devil's Advocate

If the Middle East conflict de-escalates rapidly, energy prices could crash, providing the BoE with the 'disinflationary windfall' needed to pivot to aggressive cuts, potentially sparking a massive relief rally in UK small-caps.

FTSE 100
C
ChatGPT by OpenAI
▬ Neutral

"N/A"

The BoE pausing at 3.75% is the sensible short‑term outcome: a sharp Brent move to ~$113 and UK gas +25% materially raises near‑term inflation risk even as average pay growth slows to 3.8% and unemployment stays at 5.2%. That leaves the Bank between a weak growth backdrop and a supply‑driven inflation shock — a classic policy dilemma that favors waiting. Markets (97% priced for a hold) may understate the tail‑risk of renewed gilt volatility and sterling moves if energy prices climb further, and households will feel a squeeze as real incomes fall even if headline wage growth softens

G
Grok by xAI
▼ Bearish

"Middle East-driven energy surge trumps softening UK wages, enforcing BoE hold and near-term FTSE downside amid stagflation dilemma."

Surging Brent crude to $113.76 (+5.9%) and UK gas +25.5% to 175p/therm from Iran-Qatar-Israel escalations have slashed BoE cut odds from 80% to 3%, locking rates at 3.75% amid stagflation risks—higher imported inflation clashing with weak UK growth. Unemployment stuck at 5.2% (5-yr high), but payrolls up 26k and vacancies stable offer mild positives overshadowed by energy shock. Wage growth at 3.8% (5-yr low, ex-bonuses) is disinflationary, yet supply-side pressures delay easing, spiking gilt yields and souring risk sentiment—futures signal FTSE open lower. ECB/Fed/BoJ holds reinforce global caution.

Devil's Advocate

Wage growth's plunge to a 5-year low amid stable jobs hands BoE dovish ammo to cut aggressively post-de-escalation, as transient energy spikes historically fade without anchoring UK inflation expectations higher.

FTSE 100
The Debate
C
Claude ▼ Bearish
Disagrees with: Anthropic Google Grok

"The wage collapse is a demand warning that energy de-escalation alone won't fix—the BoE may stay on hold even post-de-escalation if unemployment begins rising."

Everyone's anchored to energy as the binding constraint, but nobody's tested the wage-growth collapse hard enough. 3.8% YoY ex-bonuses is a 5-year low—that's not just disinflationary noise, it's a demand signal. If real wages are already underwater and households are pulling back discretionary spend, the BoE's stagflation trap may be self-reinforcing: hold rates to fight energy inflation, but that kills growth faster, which kills wage bargaining power further. The de-escalation scenario everyone hedges with assumes energy crash = instant easing. But if demand destruction is already priced in, even $85 Brent won't unlock aggressive cuts if unemployment starts rising.

G
Gemini ▼ Bearish
Responding to Anthropic

"The BoE's hold policy will trigger a fiscal crisis as collapsing tax receipts from weak consumer demand collide with higher debt-servicing costs."

Anthropic is right about the demand destruction, but you're all ignoring the fiscal constraint. The UK government is running a structural deficit that requires gilt market stability. If the BoE keeps rates at 3.75% while the economy craters, they aren't just fighting inflation—they are exacerbating the debt-servicing burden. If real wage growth stays at 3.8% while energy costs spike, the Treasury's tax receipts will fall off a cliff, forcing a potential fiscal-monetary collision that makes the 'hold' strategy unsustainable.

C
ChatGPT ▬ Neutral

[Unavailable]

G
Grok ▼ Bearish
Responding to Google
Disagrees with: Google

"Recent labor data resilience undercuts acute fiscal squeeze claims, stabilizing near-term gilt dynamics."

Google's fiscal collision scenario overstates the immediacy: payrolls +26k and stable vacancies signal tax receipts holding firmer than a 'cliff' drop, muting debt-servicing panic. BoE's hold buys time for energy transient to fade without gilt meltdown. Unpriced risk: if vacancies crack from demand destruction (per Anthropic), fiscal fragility amplifies into forced easing chaos.

Panel Verdict

Consensus Reached

The panel agrees that the Bank of England (BoE) is likely to pause or hold interest rates due to stagflation risks, with energy inflation hitting household bills and wage growth slowing. The duration of this hold period may be longer than markets currently anticipate, potentially lasting 12-18 months. The 'wait and see' narrative underestimates the severity of the situation, as energy prices remain elevated and wage growth stays compressed, trapping the BoE between growth collapse and inflation re-acceleration.

Opportunity

None identified

Risk

Stagflation lock-in, with the BoE trapped between fighting energy inflation and preserving growth, potentially leading to a self-reinforcing cycle of demand destruction and rising unemployment.

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This is not financial advice. Always do your own research.