We'll leave you today with a summary of what we learned from the Bank of England interest rate decision this lunchtime.
The Bank's nine-member Monetary Policy Committee opted to hold the rate at 3.75% - a decision that had been widely expected.
But the vote was tight - five members wanted it to be held, while the other four wanted a cut to 3.5%.
This has ramped up anticipation for a cut either next month or April.
Markets expect that would be one of two cuts this year, taking the rate to 3.25% by December.
Here are four other key things to know:
- The Bank =cut its outlook for economic growth from 1.2% to 0.9% this year, and from 1.6% to 1.5% in 2027;
- Inflation is now expected to reach the Bank's 2% target in April - a year earlier than had been predicted in November. Reduced rises in utility and energy bills are one key reason - smaller wage growth is another;
- Pay growth is expected to average 3.4% over the year, down from 4% in 2025;
- Trade union Unite criticised the Bank's decision, saying it risked "prolonging the cost of living crisis".