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Bank of England drawn into UK fiscal mess

October 14, 2022

The Bank of England has expanded its emergency purchases of government bonds to calm financial markets riled by a government plan to cut taxes. As a crucial deadline looms, everyone is asking: will it work?

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Britain's Prime Minister Liz Truss and Chancellor of the Exchequer Kwasi Kwarteng wearing hard hats and hi-vis jackets during a visit of a construction site in Birmingham, England
Are Liz Truss (center) and Kwasi Kwarteng (left) blowing up Britain's finances?Image: Stefan Rousseau/POOL/AFP/Getty Images

The British pound rose on Thursday in volatile trade as investors awaited the impending deadline for the Bank of England (BoE) to end an emergency bond-buying program.

A day earlier, the British currency fell to an almost two-week low but rebounded after the Financial Times reported that the BoE had signaled privately to lenders that it was prepared to extend its bond purchases beyond Friday's deadline, if market conditions demanded it.

Additional support for UK sovereign debt and sterling came following the news that Prime Minister Liz Truss is due to announce that she backing down from the package of tax cuts her government announced in late September. 

BoE wades into UK financial quagmire

The Bank of England decided earlier this week to expand its emergency purchases of UK government bonds — known as gilts — aimed at calming financial markets riled by the government plan to cut taxes without a clear plan of how they will be financed. 

The BoE doubled to £10 billion ($11 billion, €10.9 billion) the amount of bonds it is prepared to buy daily on the open market to stem rising borrowing costs.

Speaking in Washington this week, BoE Governor Andrew Bailey said it was up to the funds concerned to rebalance their holdings. "My message to the funds involved: you’ve got three days left now. You have got to get this done," he said.

A British protester who is against the euro poses outside the bank of England in London
The Bank of England is a symbol of the UK's 'exceptionalism' for many patriotic BritsImage: Nicolas Asfouri/AFP/Getty Images

Bailey's statement was an attempt to draw a line in a rapidly hemorrhaging market, to make a show of strength. But the outcome is far from certain, as the government and the central bank seem to be pulling in opposite directions. As one trader put it, the situation is like a car being driven by two people — one with her foot on the accelerator, the other with his foot on the brake.

The BoE stepped in two weeks ago with a £65 billion bond-buying program to calm the market after Kwasi Kwarteng, who was dismissed from his post as Treasury chief on Friday, unveiled plans on September 23 for £45 billion worth of tax cuts and £60 billion in increased spending to help households and businesses survive increases in energy prices this winter.

Truss: Economic growth will cover tax cut gap 

Truss said in parliament on Wednesday that the government would not reduce spending, leaving many asking how it plans to finance its tax cuts. She said economic growth would cover the gap.

However, the UK economy shrank 0.3% in August month-on-month and economists told the government that growth is unlikely in the foreseeable future.

The government’s credibility is already on a rocky path. Charlie Bean, a former deputy governor at the central bank, told BBC Radio 4's Today program on Thursday, for example, that the turbulence felt by the markets was the result of "unfunded tax cuts and the looming prospect" of more in the medium term."

The BoE’s bond purchases worked initially, but the bank said on Monday that volatility on bond markets again posed a "material risk" to the UK's fiscal stability after government bond yields, which move inversely to prices, rose to levels last seen after the government announced plans for tax cuts late last month.

The sell-off hit index-linked bonds especially hard, with the yield on 30-year bonds rising over 5% — a level that had previously sounded the alarm bells because it means unsustainable borrowing costs for Britain.

Pension funds in the thick of it

Meanwhile, UK pension schemes are racing to raise hundreds of billions of pounds to shore up derivatives positions before the BoE's Friday deadline. Bond yields rose so far and so fast that the funds' risk insurance products were demanding huge amounts of cash, reportedly about £320 billion, forcing pension funds into a fire sale of bonds, which drove prices still lower and yields higher.

Just over 750,000 Britons aged over 55 who are still working and have defined contribution workplace and personal pensions may have already seen falls in the value of their pensions. Former pensions minister Steve Webb estimated that about half that number could have seen the value drop by at least £10,000 due to the recent turbulence.

Investors are concerned that the government's plans will also fuel inflation, already running at a near 40-year high of 9.9% in the UK. The BoE's target rate is 2%.

The problem is that, on one hand, the BoE is obliged to slow the economy by tightening monetary policy to tame inflation and is now simultaneously also forced to buy bonds to avoid a market collapse which is putting more cash into the system, thus increasing the need to raise interest rates even higher.

A picture of people participating in an "Enough is Enough" rally amid the cost-of-living crisis in the UK
UK citizens have taken to the streets in anti-government protests caused by a massive cost-of-living crisisImage: Tayfun Salci/ZUMA/picture alliance

Rising interest rates obviously feed into higher mortgage rates. The average two-year fixed mortgage rate in the UK has risen to 6.46%, from 6.07% last week, and 2.25% a year ago. 

Contagion is possible

The UK's financial turmoil is also creating contagion concerns. Britain's cost of borrowing on international money markets is above the rates paid by Greece and Italy. The five-year bond has risen to 4.6%, which compares with Italy's 4% and the 4.1% rate of interest paid by Greece. German five-year bonds currently yield around 2%.

The question is whether other central banks will be able to tighten monetary policy when government spending rises due to the cost-of-living and energy crisis.

Edited by: Uwe Hessler

This piece has been updated to reflect Kwasi Kwarteng's sacking as Treasury chief.

Head shot of a man (Jo Harper) with grey hair and brown eyes
Jo Harper Journalist and author specializing in Poland