On Thursday, February 12, 2026, the British Pound is facing significant selling pressure following a “soft” GDP report that confirms the UK economy ended 2025 in the “slow lane.” GBP/USD is currently trading near 1.3615, down slightly on the day as traders ramp up bets for a Bank of England (BoE) rate cut as early as March.
The preliminary data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) shows that the UK economy eked out a meager 0.1% growth in the fourth quarter of 2025, missing the consensus forecast of 0.2%.
UK GDP: The “Slow Lane” Reality
The report paints a picture of an economy struggling with high borrowing costs and dampened consumer confidence following last year’s late-season budget.
Quarterly Growth (Q4): Just 0.1%, slowing from the already modest 0.1% seen in Q3.
Monthly Snapshot: December saw a marginal 0.1% uplift, which was in line with expectations but failed to offset downward revisions to November’s data.
Sector Performance: While services showed tentative signs of improvement, fixed investment and exports remained significant drags on overall output.
Annual Context: While the UK managed to grow slightly faster than in 2024, the momentum heading into 2026 is described by city economists as “lacklustre.”
The “March Cut” Countdown
The GDP miss has fundamentally shifted the odds for the Bank of England’s next move. With inflation expected to dip below the 2% target by April, the central bank is under mounting pressure to pivot toward easing to spur growth.
| Economic Signal | Market Reaction |
| GDP Miss (0.1%) | Heightens “recession risk” concerns for early 2026. |
| BoE March Bet | Traders now see a 65% chance of a 25bps rate cut in March. |
| GBP/USD Support | Immediate support sits at 1.3600; a break below could target 1.3540. |
| Yield Impact | UK 10-year Gilt yields have edged lower as markets price in “quickfire” cuts. |
“The UK economy barely kept its head above water at the back end of last year. These figures leave the Bank of England with very little choice but to consider a pro-growth rate cut in the coming weeks.” — Luke Bartholomew, Deputy Chief Economist, February 12, 2026






