KEY POINTS
  • After plunging a record 20.4% in the second quarter to officially enter recession, the U.K. economy saw signs of recovery with a 6.6% monthly expansion in July. The BOE expects third-quarter GDP to be 7% lower than in the fourth quarter of 2019.
  • Despite stronger-than-expected domestic economic data in recent months, the central bank said the economic outlook remains "unusually uncertain."
  • The Bank of England revealed that the MPC had been briefed on the Bank's plans to explore how a negative bank rate could be implemented effectively, meaning it is now openly considering how to use negative interest rates.

LONDON - The Bank of England on Thursday left interest rates unchanged and maintained its current level of asset purchases, but warned that the outlook for the economy remains "unusually uncertain."

All members of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) voted to keep the main lending rate at 0.1%, with the central bank having cut rates twice from 0.75% since the beginning of the pandemic. The MPC also voted unanimously to maintain target for the total stock of its bond purchases at £745 billion ($960.8 billion).