What’s more, there have been no further “Who Killed Bambi?” episodes, which is good news. Mostly good news, anyway: The ...
Georgie Frost, Simon Lambert and Helen Crane discuss the impact of the rate cut and the Bank of England's forecasts. Plus, a mortgage trick, trade wars and Nectar theft.
We are updating it to reflect the release of Severance’s second-season episode, “Woe’s Hollow.” You want to know what a bottle episode is. We’re ready to help. (And if you need to return ...
The Bank of England lowered interest rates by a quarter of a percentage ... while two officials called for a bigger rate cut against a backdrop of weaker growth. The cut to 4.5% was in line with ...
LONDON (AP) — The Bank of England halved its growth projection for ... down from its previous forecast of 1.5% just three months ago. If that turns out to be remotely accurate, it will be ...
The Bank of England cut interest rates on 6 February from 4.75 per cent to 4.5 per cent. The decision came as little surprise to financial markets, with the 0.25 basis point cut widely predicted ...
The Bank of England has cut interest rates to 4.5%, slashing its growth forecast for the UK economy Andrew Bailey says he is a "very strong supporter" of the growth agenda, saying potential growth ...
The Bank of England cut rates to 4.5% amid easing inflation but flagged lingering risks. GDP growth remains weak, and potential US tariffs add uncertainty. The pound fell, while the FTSE 100 hit ...
Bank of England reduces interest rate to 4.5% and halves 2025 growth forecast Bank of England cuts interest rate as it happened: Base rate falls to 4.5%; economic growth forecast also reduced on x ...
Analysts are betting on interest rates in the UK being cut today as the Bank of England is expected to slash the cost of borrowing to their lowest level in 18 months later today. Economists widely ...
The Bank of England made its first interest rate cut of 2025 on Thursday amid ongoing concerns over sluggish growth in the British economy.
The Bank of England has cut interest rates to 4.5% from 4.75%. The decision could lead to cheaper borrowing costs for things like mortgages and loans, but also lower returns on savings.