By Naomi Rovnick
LONDON (Reuters) -Asset managers whose companies oversee more than $1.5 trillion are urging the Bank of England to scrap bond sales they believe place unnecessary strain on Britain’s government debt, while they also rack up tens of billions of pounds of taxpayer costs.
Reuters spoke to 10 investors who had wanted the central bank to halt the sales before it pledged on September 18 to slow its overall runoff, which includes bonds that mature. They don’t think the BoE has gone far enough and recommend changing the policy, including a complete halt to sales.
As finance minister Rachel Reeves’ annual budget looms in November, Britain’s long-term borrowing costs are the highest among G7 advanced economies. Sticky inflation and fiscal worries are depressing the value of bonds, known as gilts, while the BoE is also actively selling its holdings into weak UK debt markets, recording losses.
GILT MARKET INSTABILITY
The Treasury compensates the central bank for bond-market losses. While taxpayers previously benefited from gains on the bonds, the arrangement now costs the government 22 billion pounds ($29.6 billion) annually, research by former BoE economist Carsten Jung shows.
“Many investors including ourselves have been saying to the Bank of England you’re making the problem worse, not better. Stop doing this,” said RBC BlueBay Asset Management fixed income CIO Mark Dowding, who directly oversees assets of about $154 billion. He said he doesn’t own gilts and is betting on the pound weakening against the euro.
Dowding had shared his view with BoE officials before the central bank announced it would reduce the pace of the gilt runoff to 70 billion pounds ($94 billion) from 100 billion pounds annually. He’s still expecting gilt market instability and has since suggested to the UK debt office to stop issuing long-dated bonds to raise funds.
The BoE declined to comment while a Treasury spokesperson declined to comment on whether the government would consider changes to reduce the strain on public finances.
The BoE hoovered up 875 billion pounds worth of government bonds between 2009 and 2021 to support the UK economy and then moved to offload them faster than other major central banks. This so-called quantitative tightening followed years of easing by central banks in the aftermath of the global financial crisis and the pandemic.
‘FISCAL FEEDBACK LOOP’
A 2024 Treasury Committee report called the QT plan a “leap in the dark” with more public money at stake than was ever envisaged. One 40-year gilt issued in 2020 is now trading at 24% of its original issue price, in a sign of the potential losses the BoE faces.