XM, Amerika Birleşik Devletleri'nde ikamet edenlere hizmet sunmamaktadır.

BoE quantitative tightening goal entangled in 'fiscal jiggery-pokery': Mike Dolan



<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><head><title>COLUMN-BoE quantitative tightening goal entangled in 'fiscal jiggery-pokery': Mike Dolan</title></head><body>

By Mike Dolan

LONDON, Sept 18 (Reuters) -The Bank of England may sit out this month's interest rate cutting bonanza, but Thursday's meeting will still be meaningful, as it will throw a spotlight on the BoE's delicate dance with the UK Treasury.

The BoE's hesitation in delivering its second rate cut of the year is partly due to questions about how it will incorporate next month's budget statement from the new UK Labour government into its thinking on inflation and growth over the next year.

The UK government's murmuring thus far indicate that it's going to put forward a tight budget. This should help the BoE in its efforts to cover the sticky "last mile" of disinflation in services and wages, and it may well clear the decks for more rapid monetary easing moving ahead.

And the BoE may end up returning the favour, whether it intends to or not.

The Bank is due to announce next year's target for reducing its pandemic-bloated balance sheet of gilts. This "quantitative tightening" (QT) plan is technically separate from its rate policy, and a programme it likely hopes it can pass off without much attention or disruption.

But the BoE's QT announcement may be hard to shuffle away quietly.

That's partlybecause it has been one of the few major central banks to engage in active sales of bonds to downsize its balance sheet. In other words, it's not just allowing the debt to mature and roll off organically like the Federal Reserve orEuropean Central Bank.

And this time around, there's a twist in the calculation - one that should affect both BoE activity in the bond market over the year ahead and the new Labour government's fiscal math for its keenly-awaited and controversial first budget statement.

As it stands, the overwhelming market consensus is the BoE will simply recycle last year's goal of reducing the balance sheet by 100 billion pounds ($131.59 billion)over the coming 12 months. So far, so simple - and in keeping with the BoE's stated aim to be predictable.

The issue, however, is that next year will feature a heavier schedule of maturing debt. So a 100 billion-poundtargeted runoff would mean active gilt sales would be 75% lower compared to the totals recorded over the past 12 months.

And analysts think that the roughly 13 billion poundsof gilt sales required could be completed by year-end, removing the BoE as a seller completely for most of next year.

That's likely to be a boon for bond investors - but also forthe Chancellor of the Exchequer.


GILT FREE?

A quirk in the QT process is that it crystallisesvaluation losses incurred on the bonds between the period in which the BoE bought them, when policy interest rates were near zero, and now, when rates are 5%. The price of those bonds will have plummeted in the meantime.

Given that the Treasury is effectively on the hook for BoE losses, QT crimps the government's fiscal space and scope.

True, these calculation may merely be shifting the periods in which balance sheet losses are booked, but this added wiggle room could still be a big help for an incoming government under pressure to fill what it claims to be an inherited fiscal hole of some 20 billion pounds.

To be sure, not everyone thinks the BoE will stick to the 100 billion QT figure for the year ahead - so the "gift" of fiscal wiggle room may not materialise.

Deutsche Bank's UK economist Sanjay Raja thinks the BOE may want to retain a "more consistent footprint" of gilt sales. So he sees it lifting the overall QT target to ensure quarterly gilt sales of 5 billion to 10 billion pounds - not least because active sales will have to rise again the following year.

The BoE's estimate of its balance sheet's "steady state" - that is, the size it'll be comfortable with over the long term -implies another 230 billion-poundreduction at least. That suggests the QT process has at least another couple of years to run.

Yet, the question of whether UK finance minister Rachel Reeves will use the Treasury's BoE exposure to game its own self-imposed fiscal rules is certainly a live one.

There's much speculation about whether Reeves will change the definition of "public sector net debt" that it uses in its five-year debt reduction pledge by excluding BoE exposure, unlike the previous government.

The independent Institute for Fiscal Studies last month estimated that based on the last budget, such a move could open as much 16 billion pounds of "fiscal headroom" for the government. The institute also noted this move could be justified if used for investment spending and would be tempting as it involves changes "few people understand or care about".

But even so, the think tank said shifting goalposts to make the figures add up seemed hard to justify.

"If the government wants to borrow more and spend more, it would ideally make the case for doing so on its own terms, rather than hide behind fiscal jiggery-pokery," it added.

Whether the BoE QT plays ball on Thursday remains to be seen.

The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters



($1 = 0.7599 pounds)


BoE gilt holdings, rates and yields https://tmsnrt.rs/3ZqM9YU

BoE makes first interest rate cut since 2020 https://reut.rs/3YuZoY2

IFS chart on different UK definitions public net debt https://tmsnrt.rs/3zv6amr

OBR chart on long-term UK debt risks https://tmsnrt.rs/3MO2gZ3

BoE chart on balance sheet history as % of GDP https://tmsnrt.rs/44OTWAz


By Mike Dolan; Editing by Jamie Freed

</body></html>

Bildirim: XM Group şirketlerinin her biri yalnızca gerçekleştirme hizmeti ve online yatırım platformumuza erişim sağlar. Herhangi bir kişinin web sitesinde bulunan veya web sitesi üzerinden sağlanan içeriği görüntülemesine ve/veya kullanmasına izin vermek, bu hizmeti değiştirmek veya genişletmek amaçlı değildir ve bu hizmeti ne değiştirir ne de genişletir. Bu tür erişim ve kullanım her zaman şunlara tabidir: (i) Şartlar ve Koşullar; (ii) Risk Uyarıları ve (iii) Tam Bildirim. Bu nedenle bu tür içerikler yalnızca genel bilgi amacıyla sağlanır. Özellikle, online yatırım platformumuzun içeriklerinin finans piyasalarında herhangi bir işleme girmek için bir teşvik veya bir teklif olmadığını lütfen dikkate alın. Herhangi bir finans piyasasında yatırım yapmak sermayeniz için önemli düzeyde risk taşır.

Online yatırım platformumuzda yayınlanan tüm materyaller yalnızca eğitim/bilgilendirme amaçlıdır ve finansal tavsiye, yatırım vergisi veya yatırım tavsiyesi ve önerileri ya da yatırım fiyatlarımızın kaydı veya herhangi bir finansal enstrümanda işlem yapılması için bir teklif veya teşvik ya da talep edilmemiş finansal promosyonları içermez ve içerdiği şeklinde bir değerlendirme yapılmamalıdır.

Görüşler, haberler, araştırma, analizler, fiyatlar, diğer bilgiler veya bu web sitesinde bulunan üçüncü taraf sitelere verilen bağlantılar gibi her türlü üçüncü taraf içeriğin yanı sıra XM tarafından hazırlanan içerik de “olduğu gibi” esasına göre, genel piyasa yorumu olarak sağlanır ve bir yatırım tavsiyesi oluşturmaz. Herhangi bir içeriğin yatırım araştırması olarak yorumlanmasıyla ilgili olarak, içeriğin bağımsız yatırım araştırmasını desteklemek üzere tasarlanmış yasal gerekliliklere uygun hazırlanmadığını ve bu amacın güdülmediğini, aynı şekilde ilgili yasalar ve mevzuatlar kapsamında pazarlama iletişimi olarak değerlendirileceğini dikkate almalı ve kabul etmelisiniz. Buradan erişebileceğiniz Bağımsız Olmayan Yatırım Araştırması Bildirimimizi ve yukarıdaki bilgilerle ilgili Risk Uyarımızı okuduğunuzdan ve anladığınızdan emin olun.

Risk uyarısı: Sermayeniz risk altında. Kaldıraçlı ürünler herkese uygun olmayabilir. Lütfen Risk Bildirimi'mizi dikkate alın.