Rabobank’s Stefan Koopman says the BoE held rates at 3.75% but sounded hawkish amid renewed energy-driven inflation concerns

    by VT Markets
    /
    Mar 19, 2026
    The Bank of England kept Bank Rate at 3.75% and communicated a more hawkish stance after a renewed energy shock pushed up inflation projections. The Monetary Policy Committee signalled readiness to respond if inflation pressures persist. The minutes showed the energy crisis is now central to policy discussions, with attention shifting towards inflation persistence and away from a weakening labour market. Inflation risk was framed more as an external shock than as a domestically driven risk.

    Rabobank Outlook And Risks

    Rabobank now forecasts one 25 basis point rise, possibly in April. It also warned that further tightening amid weak UK demand could compress demand further, on top of the terms-of-trade squeeze caused by higher energy costs. The commentary said the MPC is not prepared to fully look through the supply shock unless the conflict proves very short-lived. The article notes it was produced using an AI tool and reviewed by an editor. The dilemma we saw back in early 2025 continues to dominate the Bank of England’s thinking. With the latest February 2026 inflation data coming in hot at 3.1%, the market is second-guessing the timing of expected rate cuts. This echoes the fears from last year when the renewed energy shock forced policymakers into a hawkish corner, a move that pushed the Bank Rate to its current 4.00%. Traders should be looking at SONIA futures, which are currently pricing in at least two rate cuts by the end of this year. If you believe the stubborn inflation will force the Bank to delay these cuts, then selling these futures is the logical play. This position bets that the Bank’s monetary policy will hold for longer than the market anticipates.

    Trading Implications For Pound And Equities

    For the pound, this uncertainty creates a prime environment for volatility trading. Options strategies like a long straddle on GBP/USD could be effective, as they profit from a significant price move in either direction without needing to guess the outcome. The market is coiled tightly, and any surprise from the Bank in its next meeting will likely cause a sharp breakout. The warning from 2025 about tightening into weakness being “bearish for UK assets” remains highly relevant today. Given that Q4 2025 GDP showed a minor contraction of 0.1%, any further delay in rate cuts could pressure corporate earnings. Consequently, buying put options on the FTSE 100 index serves as a direct hedge against the risk of the Bank making another policy mistake. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.

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