By David Milliken and Suban Abdulla
LONDON (Reuters) – The Bank of England slowed the pace of its programme to run down its government bond stockpile on Thursday and skewed sales away from long-dated debt in a bid to minimise the impact on volatile gilt markets.
The central bank kept its main interest rate on hold at 4% after August’s quarter-percentage-point cut, as expected.
The BoE bought 875 billion pounds ($1.19 trillion) of British government bonds between 2009 and 2021 to boost the economy, then started to reverse these purchases in 2022 in a process known as quantitative tightening, or QT.
Unlike other central banks, it has sold bonds outright as well as letting them mature, something critics say contributed to 30-year gilt yields hitting a 27-year high this month.
POLICYMAKERS SPLIT ON PACE OF BOND STOCK RUNDOWN
Monetary Policy Committee members voted 7-2 to slow the pace at which the BoE unloads gilts to 70 billion pounds between October 2025 and September 2026 from 100 billion pounds over the past 12 months.
The decision was broadly in line with a median forecast of 67.5 billion pounds in a Reuters poll of economists and will reduce the BoE’s main government bond holdings to 488 billion pounds by October 2026.
“The new target means the MPC can continue to reduce the size of the Bank’s balance sheet in line with its monetary policy objectives while continuing to minimise the impact of gilt market conditions,” Governor Andrew Bailey said.
The QT slowdown is the first since the BoE started to unwind its gilt holdings in February 2022. Bailey said QT was needed to restore room for future stimulus and reduce potential distortions in financial markets.
Thursday’s vote also represented the first split by policymakers on the pace of QT.
BoE Chief Economist Huw Pill voted to keep it at 100 billion pounds a year, saying the impact on markets was small. Catherine Mann called for a 62 billion-pound reduction.
The BoE said sales would be split 40:40:20 between short-, medium- and long-dated gilts, based on their initial purchase price. Mann said she wanted to continue with an even split.
Britain’s Debt Management Office has already largely shifted gilt issuance to short- and medium-dated bonds due to a fall in pension funds’ appetite for long-dated debt and global factors that have raised the cost of long-term borrowing.
Long-dated gilt yields hit their highest since 1998 this month, making it harder for finance minister Rachel Reeves to meet her own rules when she delivers her November 26 budget.
