The Bank of England has maintained its interest rate at 5%, contrasting with the US Federal Reserve’s rate cut to 4.8%.
The base rate is what the Bank of England charges other banks and lenders to borrow money - this then impacts how much you're ...
The Bank of England base rate can affect everything from your mortgage to the rates applied to credit cards - we round up ...
The Bank of Japan began a two-day policy meeting Thursday amid growing expectations that the central bank would keep interest ...
Bank of England expected to hold rates despite huge US Fed cut - Economists expect Monetary Policy Committee to keep rates on ...
"In skipping a rate cut this round, policymakers largely met expectations with an 8-1 vote capturing consensus building after ... react to news that the Bank of England left its main bank rate ...
The average rate on a two-year fixed deal this week stood at 5.74%, while average rates for a five-year deal came in at 5.24% ...
The Bank of England's decision to hold interest rates at 5% was anticipated ... Had a rate cut occurred, we would have seen a swift follow-through from other banks and building societies.” For credit ...
A decision by the Bank of England on Thursday could give Reeves more headroom in her Budget - though some economists are ...
Savers are £4 billion a year better off following a Financial Conduct Authority cash savings market review. Will interest ...
Savers are being hit with a "significant fall" in interest rates attached to accounts, according to new research conducted by ...
The Bank of England has decided to hold the Base Rate ... “Challenger banks and building societies continue to offer some of the top returns and have the same deposit protections in place ...