The Bank of England is scheduled to make its next monetary policy decision following its June 2026 meeting, where the Monetary Policy Committee will announce whether interest rates will rise, fall, or remain unchanged. This decision carries significant implications for the UK economy, affecting everything from mortgage rates and savings yields to broader inflation and employment trends. The prediction markets grouped here reflect all possible outcomes from the Bank of England's rate-setting announcement, allowing observers to track what market participants collectively forecast will happen. These five markets represent the complete spectrum of likely policy moves: a significant rate decrease of 50 basis points or more, a substantial rate increase of 50 basis points or more, a moderate decrease of 25 basis points, a moderate increase of 25 basis points, and the possibility of no change to the current base rate. By examining the probability distributions across these markets, you can gain insight into market consensus about the central bank's stance on inflation, economic growth, and employment. The relative prices in each market reflect the aggregate expectations of traders and indicate where the most likely outcome is perceived to be at any given moment. When reviewing these prices, consider the broader economic context—recent inflation data, employment figures, statements from Bank of England officials, and global economic conditions all inform the probability estimates you see here. Markets that show high probability for a rate cut typically indicate expectations of economic weakness or undershooting inflation, while high probability for a rate hike suggests concerns about inflation persistence. The no-change market serves as a baseline, and its probability often reveals how much uncertainty exists around any policy action. By comparing the prices across these five markets, you're observing a real-time aggregation of expectations from market participants worldwide.