ECB, BOE, Riksbank and Norges Bank make final calls of 2025

A projected illumination marking the 75th anniversary of the Schuman Declaration, on the Grossmarkthalle building at the European Central Bank headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany, on May 9, 2025.

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Investors are gearing up for the last interest-rate decisions of 2025, with four of Europe’s central banks announcing their monetary policies and macroeconomic outlooks on Thursday.

The European Central Bank, Bank of England, Riksbank, and Norges Bank are all meeting, but only one of them is expected to change its rate.

This is what to expect:

European Central Bank

Norges Bank

Norway’s central bank kept rates on hold at 4% on Thursday, with economists suggesting the next rate cut might not come until summer 2026. Norges Bank announced its policy decision at 10 a.m. local time, 9 a.m. London time.

The bank said Thursday that the outlook is uncertain “but if the economy evolves broadly as currently projected, the policy rate will be reduced further in the course of the coming year.” For now, however, Norges Bank’s policymakers judged “that a restrictive monetary policy is still needed.  Inflation is still too high.” It added that its current forecast “is consistent with 1-2 rate cuts next year.”

Morten Lund, Scandinavia chief economist at JPMorgan, had commented before the rate hold that the bank’s guidance on Thursday “should be a push-back against markets’ rising expectations” that it will cut rates in March, which he said was currently seen as “a coin toss.”

Norges Bank

Tomm W. Christiansen | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Instead, JPMorgan expects a rate cut to next take place in June, although Norges Bank was not, on Thursday, explicit about the timing of a cut.

CNBC will be interviewing Ida Wolden Bache, the governor of Norges Bank, at 12.10 p.m. London time, 1.10 p.m. CET.

Riksbank

Bank of England

A decorated Christmas tree outside The Royal Exchange near the Bank of England (BOE) in the City of London, UK, on Monday, Dec. 16, 2024. The British central bank is expected to leave rates unchanged at 4.75% at its meeting on Thursday and maintain its guidance that a “gradual approach to removing policy restraint remains appropriate.” Photographer: Jason Alden/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

While inflation remains above the bank’s 2% target, the trend downwards gives the bank room for manoeuvre when it comes to lowering interest rates to stimulate the economy, consumption and borrowing.

The government’s Autumn Budget last month was also seen as disinflationary, given it included measures to lower energy bills and freeze fuel duty and train fares.

CNBC’s “Decision Time” program at 12 p.m. London time for live coverage of the BOE’s decision. Karen Tso will be joined in the studio by Jack Meaning, U.K. chief economist at Barclays, on what the decision means for the economy, markets and consumers.

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