In its June meeting, the Bank of England decided with a 6-3 majority to maintain the Bank Rate at 4.25%, facing the challenges of significant global uncertainty and ongoing inflation pressures. Although three members preferred a 0.25 percentage point reduction to 4%, investors had anticipated a 7-2 division. The central bank pointed out that consumer price inflation is expected to stay approximately at current levels for the rest of the year, with a decline towards the target anticipated next year. Nonetheless, it highlighted the presence of "two-sided risks to inflation." These concerns are due to rising energy costs in the context of the escalating Middle East conflict and potential trade disruptions due to proposed US tariffs. The bank also mentioned that the underlying growth of UK GDP "appears to have remained weak," while the labor market has "continued to loosen." Despite these challenges, considering the broader economic outlook and ongoing disinflation, the Bank reiterated that a gradual and cautious approach to further dismantling monetary policy restraints is still appropriate.