BoE has spelt out what was at stake when events last week turned extreme, though surely not unimaginable

It was a close-run thing. That is a less-than-reassuring summary of the Bank of England’s analysis of its emergency intervention in the gilts market last week. Sir Jon Cunliffe, deputy governor for financial stability, spelled out what was at stake: “An excessive and sudden tightening of financing conditions for the real economy.” Translation: the current bout of turmoil in the mortgage market, for instance, would feel like a minor squall.

Some of the numbers in Cunliffe’s 11-page letter to the Treasury select committee are extraordinary. Pension funds, facing demands to put up collateral to support their holdings in LDIs, or liability-driven investments, were looking at dumping £50bn of long-dated government debt in “a short space of time”. This is a market where daily trading volumes are just £12bn.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Kwarteng had ‘all the advice’ but disregarded warnings on mini-budget, MPs told

Treasury officials tell select committee they set out impacts of £45bn plan…

Dismay as X’s most-followed accounts given blue ticks for free

Elon Musk’s firm reverses policy of insisting on payment for ‘verified status’…

My son seems to blame me for his anxiety. How can we reconnect?

You are trying so hard, but at 22 he needs you to…