Members of the interest rate setting committee will no doubt have concluded that in the absence of comprehensive information (yet) about consumer spending patterns during the all-important Christmas holiday season erring on the side of caution was the correct path to take now.
Adding to the uncertainty has been the relative lack of information regarding wage settlements - the Bank needing to be reassured first that workers haven't been negotiating bumper pay deals in response to accelerating inflation seen last year.
At the moment the general consensus is that there's scope for one further rate cut this year. However, hopes that it could come as early as next month now appear to be receding given what information has been coming out of the High Street. There, better-than-expected trading numbers from the likes of Carphone Warehouse, Marks & Spencer, Jessops, John Lewis and GUS have suggested that the Bank may not have overstated Britain's growth prospects for this year after all. More so, given just published figures showing manufacturing output hitting a 7-month high.
What may yet give the Bank some wiggle room is the likelihood of inflation continuing to slow, thereby allowing it to meet its self imposed annual target.