High-risk outright sales of gilts to start in September
The BoE plans to sell £10bn of gilts from its QE portfolio every quarter for the next 12 months, starting in September. This corresponds to a balance sheet reduction target of £80bn over the same period (the rest being ‘passive’ non-reinvestment of maturity proceeds). This plan puts the focus on the private market’s ability to absorb more sovereign debt. Assuming a reduction of £80bn per year, this means private investors will have to increase their exposure to gilts by the same amount, on top of regular deficit-financing. This is clearly a risk to our benign gilt yields view.
The second aspect of the BoE QT plan is active sales. Going back to our example above, if the QT target is 80bn per year and that, as is the case in FY 2023-24, passive reduction is only £36bn, this means that the remainder, £44bn, will be achieved via gilt sales. First, this is a non-negligible amount. For reference, the past 10 years have seen gross gilt sales of £171bn per year by the DMO. Secondly, we do not think current market conditions, judging by gilt bid-offer spreads and by rates implies volatility, make this a risk worth taking.
If market conditions improve, we expect sales to occur at the earliest in September, but we think it will take much longer to say with any degree of confidence that the market can accommodate this amount of gilt sales without posing risks to its functioning.
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