logo
BoE urged to hold back long-dated bonds from market

BoE urged to hold back long-dated bonds from market

The Star22-07-2025
Pedestrians pass the Bank of England (BOE) in the City of London, UK, on Thursday, May 11, 2023. Photographer Hollie Adams/Bloomberg
LONDON: The Bank of England (BoE) is facing pressure to hold onto more than a quarter of its bond holdings, potentially for decades, after recent market turmoil highlighted the fragility of demand for long-dated UK government debt.
Forecasters including Oxford Economics and HSBC Holdings Plc expect the central bank to limit sales of its remaining £163bil (US$219bil) of gilts with a term of over 20 years, or even stop the disposals altogether, in a shift to the way it is reducing its crisis-era balance sheet.
The BoE is selling its gilts portfolio, which was built up over more than a decade of quantitative easing, amid warnings of heightened volatility as a market once dominated by steady buyers such as pension funds becomes more dependent on flightier hedge funds and foreign investors.
A 30-year bond selloff in response to rumours this month that Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves was about to be fired delivered a stark reminder of the new reality.
The episode had echoes of 2022, when long-dated gilts were at the heart of the market crisis that ended Liz Truss' short-lived premiership.
Some analysts have warned the BoE may be contributing to the volatility through quantitative tightening (QT) as it competes for buyers with a big-borrowing government at a time when demand from defined-benefit pension funds is waning.
Among those advocating for a change in BoE policy is Michael Saunders, a former BoE rate-setter and now senior adviser at Oxford Economics.
He said the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) could announce that most of its holdings of long-dated debt will never be sold under a new strategy.
'The main effect would be to reduce risks that the BoE's QT programme further destabilises the gilt market,' Saunders said.
The BoE has been reducing its bond holdings, which peaked at almost £900bil, by about £100bil a year.
This year, it planned to do so through £13bil of active sales and by letting £87bil of maturing debt run off.
However, a lower level of bond redemptions due in the next year would imply far more sales if the £100bil pace is maintained, potentially posing a market risk.
Investors surveyed by the central bank expect it to slow the QT process by £25bil, implying just £26bil of active sales.
BoE governor Andrew Bailey has recently noted a 'change in the liquidity of the curve at the long end, and that has affected yields', hinting at fewer future sales than were previously expected.
QT is costing the Treasury tens of billions of pounds in both interest-rate and valuation losses on the sales, putting the BoE under rising political pressure to get the debt off its balance sheet.
However, the MPC is likely to take a cautious approach as it decides how fast to go from October, Saunders said.
The BoE is set to provide its latest analysis at its meeting on Aug 7, with a decision due in September.
Saunders' plan would see the bank continue to unwind the £290bil of gilts with a term of three to 20 years but hang onto the £163bil of long-dated gilts, those with over 20 years left to run.
About £120bil of the long-dated portfolio would be written down to the £93bil nominal issue price, crystallising a £27bil loss as a one-off rise in government debt.
Those assets would then be held against the BoE's matching £93bil of currency liabilities, effectively notes and coins in circulation. — Bloomberg
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Berkshire takes $3.8 billion Kraft Heinz writedown, operating profit falls
Berkshire takes $3.8 billion Kraft Heinz writedown, operating profit falls

New Straits Times

time18 minutes ago

  • New Straits Times

Berkshire takes $3.8 billion Kraft Heinz writedown, operating profit falls

Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway on Saturday took a US$3.76 billion writedown on its stake in Kraft Heinz, an acknowledgment the decade-old investment hasn't worked out, and reported lower quarterly operating profit as insurance underwriting premiums declined. Berkshire also reported a 59 per cent decline in quarterly net income, reflecting the writedown, as well as lower investment gains from its common stock holdings. The conglomerate run by Buffett since 1965 signaled it remains cautious about market valuations. It reported a near-record US$344.1 billion cash stake and an 11th straight quarter of selling more stocks than it bought. Through mid-July, Berkshire had also not repurchased its own stock since May 2024. Second-quarter operating income fell 4 per cent to US$11.16 billion, or about US$7,760 per Class A share, from US$11.6 billion a year earlier. Net income, including gains and losses on stocks such as Apple and American Express, fell to US$12.37 billion from US$30.35 billion. Revenue fell 1 per cent to US$92.52 billion. Buffett has long urged investors to ignore investment gains and losses, which are reflected in net results, on stocks that Berkshire still owns and often has no plans to sell. KRAFT HEINZ The US$3.76 billion after-tax writedown for Berkshire's 27.4 per cent stake in Kraft Heinz, equal to US$5 billion before taxes, followed the struggling food company's May announcement it would consider strategic alternatives, which could include a breakup. Buffett's company had been carrying Kraft Heinz on its books at above-market value but said economic and other uncertainties, as well as its longer-term plans to remain an investor, made the gap "other-than-temporary," necessitating a writedown. The writedown is Berkshire's second for Kraft Heinz, following a US$3 billion writedown in 2019. Buffett acknowledged at the time that Berkshire overpaid in the 2015 merger creating the food company. Berkshire is also carrying its 28.1 per cent stake in oil company Occidental Petroleum at US$5.3 billion above fair value, but said it saw no need for a writedown. Shares of Berkshire have fallen more than 12 per cent, and lagged the Standard & Poor's 500 by about 22 percentage points, since Buffett announced on May 3 he would step down as chief executive at the end of the year, with Vice Chairman Greg Abel replacing him. Analysts have said the premium embedded in Berkshire's stock price because of Buffett's presence has eroded, while growth may slow in the insurance sector, a major Berkshire profit center. A lack of new investments has also been a drag. Analysts believe Berkshire's BNSF unit could buy CSX to create another transcontinental railroad, after Union Pacific agreed on July 29 to buy Norfolk Southern. In his six decades running Berkshire, Buffett transformed it from a troubled and since-closed textile company into a US$1.02 trillion conglomerate with nearly 200 businesses. Berkshire owns several insurers and reinsurers, electric utility and renewable energy businesses, several chemical and industrial companies, and familiar consumer brands such as Dairy Queen, Fruit of the Loom and See's Candies. BIG BEAUTIFUL BILL IMPACT Berkshire said the 12 per cent quarterly decline in insurance underwriting profit stemmed primarily from reinsurance businesses and some smaller insurance businesses. The best-known insurance unit, Geico car insurance, saw pre-tax underwriting profit rise 2 per cent, as a 5 per cent increase in premiums offset a smaller rise in accident losses. Geico has ceded market share in recent years to State Farm and Progressive, as it focused on improving underwriting quality and technology while cutting jobs. BNSF has also tried to reduce expenses, and lower fuel costs contributed to a 19 per cent gain in quarterly profit. The energy business, Berkshire Hathaway Energy, posted a 7 per cent profit increase. Berkshire said it is evaluating the impact of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed last month by US President Donald Trump, on the "economics and viability" of its renewable energy, storage and technology neutral projects. Buffett is worth US$141.7 billion according to Forbes magazine, despite having over two decades given away well over half his Berkshire shares to charity. He is the world's ninth-richest person, dropping a few notches during Berkshire's recent share price decline.

Malaysia in a shifting world order
Malaysia in a shifting world order

Malaysiakini

time18 minutes ago

  • Malaysiakini

Malaysia in a shifting world order

COMMENT | The global geopolitical landscape is undergoing a seismic shift. For decades, American dominance economically, militarily, and diplomatically has defined the post–Cold War international order. Today, that dominance is increasingly challenged by emerging powers and shifting global alignments. The rise of competing powers, growing distrust of US intentions, and the resurgence of nationalist economic policies, particularly under Donald Trump's second term, are accelerating the fragmentation of global power. In place of a US-led unipolar order, a multipolar world is emerging, one increasingly defined by the rivalry between the United States, an emerging axis of Russia-China-India (RCI), and a recalibrated European Union. Trump's recent moves to impose tariffs on a wide swath of countries, including traditional allies like the European Union, Canada, South Korea, and India, mark a decisive...

Tengku Zafrul explains how Boeing deal led to reduced tariffs
Tengku Zafrul explains how Boeing deal led to reduced tariffs

Free Malaysia Today

time21 minutes ago

  • Free Malaysia Today

Tengku Zafrul explains how Boeing deal led to reduced tariffs

Tengku Zafrul Aziz said the Boeing aircraft are being bought by Malaysia Aviation Group with its own funds. (Bernama pic) PETALING JAYA : The US decided to reduce its planned tariffs on Malaysian exports after it learned of 'huge purchases' of US products by Malaysian companies, according to investment, trade and industry minister Tengku Zafrul Aziz. Tengku Zafrul said Malaysia had listed Malaysia Airlines' planned acquisition of Boeing aircraft as among the big-ticket purchases being made from the US. By adopting such an approach, Malaysia proved to the US that 'we, too, were huge buyers of their products and this convinced them to reduce the tariffs to 19% from the previous 25%', he said in a post on X tonight. He said Malaysia did not buy the planes 'just so we could reduce the tariffs'. Yesterday, Tengku Zafrul said Malaysia had committed to purchasing the 30 Boeing aircraft, valued at US$9.5 billion, as one of the conditions to reduce the US tariff on Malaysian imports. In March, Malaysia Aviation Group (MAG) said it had ordered 18 Boeing 737-8 and 12 Boeing 737-10 aircraft, to be delivered by 2030, and placed an option to buy 30 more 737 aircraft. Orders for hundreds of Boeing jets have been announced over the past week in deals with Japan, the United Arab Emirates, Indonesia, Cambodia, Bangladesh, and other countries as part of negotiations to reduce US tariffs. Tengku Zafrul denied that government funds were being used to purchase the planes. He said MAG would buy the planes using its own funds.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store