BOE Governor Andrew Bailey speaks in Reykjavik Friday at 0910 GMT, followed by hawk Catherine Mann in Dubrovnik Saturday at 0940 GMT and Megan Greene on stablecoins Sunday at 1230 GMT.
Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey takes the podium in Reykjavik on Friday morning at 0910 GMT (0510 US Eastern) for a speech at the 2026 economic conference, with markets alert to any signals on the pace and extent of BOE rate cuts. The BOE has been navigating a difficult inflation picture, with services prices remaining stubbornly elevated even as headline inflation has moderated, and Bailey's remarks will be parsed closely for any shift in tone on the timing of further easing. A more cautious message would support sterling; any hint of accelerating cuts would weigh on it.
On Saturday, Catherine Mann participates in a panel at the 32nd Dubrovnik Economic Conference at 0940 GMT (0540 Eastern), with the session titled Central Bank Independence Under Attack. Mann has been the MPC's most consistent hawk through the current cycle, voting to hold rates for longer than the majority of her colleagues on multiple occasions. While the panel topic is structural rather than immediately policy-focused, Mann is unlikely to pass up the opportunity to reinforce her view that central banks must guard their credibility on inflation above all else. Any commentary that strays into current rate expectations would carry weight given her track record.
Megan Greene rounds out the BOE's weekend presence on Sunday at 1230 GMT (0830 Eastern), also in Dubrovnik, on a panel examining stablecoins and monetary policy. Greene has engaged substantively with digital asset questions in the past and the topic is gaining policy relevance as stablecoin adoption grows and regulators wrestle with implications for monetary transmission. Her remarks are unlikely to be rate-sensitive but could touch on how central banks think about the boundary between traditional and digital money in a world where that line is increasingly blurred.
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Bailey is the market-sensitive event. Any deviation from the BOE's current cautious easing posture, particularly on the pace of rate cuts given sticky services inflation, would move sterling and gilts. Mann has been the MPC's most prominent hawk and her panel topic, central bank independence under attack, is unlikely to produce market-moving rate commentary but could generate headlines if she addresses political pressure on central banks more broadly.
Greene's stablecoins panel is the least likely to move markets directly, though any comments linking digital asset growth to monetary policy transmission could attract attention given the current regulatory environment.