What the Bank has to weigh up next week
By Sumeet Desai
LONDON (Reuters) - The Bank of England is expected to hold interest rates steady next week but grim economic news clearly leaves open the possibility of another quarter-point cut as the central bank prepares its new forecasts.
Only 5 out of 65 analysts polled by Reuters this week predict the Bank's Monetary Policy Committee will cut rates for the second month running and the fourth time since December when it rounds off its two-day meeting next Thursday.
But 40 say the Bank will cut borrowing costs by another quarter-point in June, taking rates down to 4.75 percent, as worries over slowing growth topple concerns about rising inflation.
Arch-dove David Blanchflower clearly looks as if he will call for lower rates next week. He said this week the economy faced recession and house prices crashing 30 percent if the central bank did not take urgent action.
But hawks like Andrew Sentance and Tim Besley seem worried about rising prices -- they opposed last month's quarter-point cut.
Here are some of the factors the Bank will consider at its two-day meeting.
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