Under water: how the Bank of England threw markets a lifeline

Under water: how the Bank of England threw markets a lifeline

by Reuters News Service
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Calls to the Bank of England saying some British pension funds were struggling to meet margin calls began on Monday. By Wednesday they were getting more urgent and coordinated.

Wild gyrations in financial markets in response to a government โ€œmini-budgetโ€ on Sept. 23 meant that swathes of Britainโ€™s pension system were at risk, raising widespread concerns about the countryโ€™s financial stability.

British Finance Minister Kwasi Kwartengโ€™s statement had included dramatic plans to slash taxes and pay for it with borrowing which sent government bond yields soaring.

In the following days, Britainโ€™s borrowing costs surged the most in decades, while the pound plunged to a record low.

But while these reactions were plain for all to see, behind the financial market screens there was a hidden impact.

At risk of blowing up were obscure financial instruments meant to match long-term pension liabilities with assets, which had never been tested by bond yields moving so far or so fast.

Among those urgently calling the BoE were funds managing so-called liability-driven investments (LDI), a seemingly simple hedging strategy at the heart of the blow-up.

The LDI market has boomed in the past decade and assets total nearly 1.6 trillion pounds ($1.79 trillion) โ€“ more than two-thirds the size of the British economy.

Pension schemes were forced to sell government bonds known as gilts after they found it hard to meet emergency demands from the LDI funds for collateral on โ€˜under-waterโ€™ derivatives positions, where the value is less than on a fundโ€™s books.

LDI funds were calling for the urgent cash to shore up loss-making positions. The funds were themselves facing margin calls from their relationship-banks and other key financial players.

โ€œWe laid our cards on the table. You donโ€™t expect them (the BoE) to give you much back because theyโ€™re not going to show you their hand, right?โ€ said James Brundrett of pension consultant and fiduciary manager Mercer, which held a meeting with the BoE on Sept. 26. โ€œThank God they listened because this morning (Sept. 28), the gilt market wasnโ€™t operating,โ€ he added.

Facing a market meltdown, the BoE stepped in with a 65 billion pound ($72.3 billion) package to buy long-dated gilts.

And echoing former European Central Bank boss Mario Draghi at the height of the euro zone debt crisis, the central bank pledged to do whatever it took to bring financial stability.

While this may have eased the immediate pressure on pension funds, it is far from clear how much time the BoE has bought as shockwaves reverberate through global markets from recently-apppointed Prime Minister Liz Trussโ€™ plan, which as well as spooking investors drew a rare IMF rebuke.

Chris Philp, chief secretary to the UK Treasury, said on Thursday he disagreed with the IMFโ€™s concerns about the governmentโ€™s tax-cutting budget, saying it would lead to long-term economic growth.

Truss on Sunday defended her plan and gave no indication she would back down, although she did say the proposal to cut taxes for the richest was Kwartengโ€™s decision, in the first sign she may be distancing herself from the chancellor.

By the end of a turbulent week, many pension funds were still liquidating positions to meet collateral requests and some were asking the companies they manage money for to bail them out with cash, sources told Reuters on Friday. โ€œThe question is what happens when the Bank of England pulls out of this market?โ€ said Mercerโ€™s Brundrett, adding that there is a window of opportunity for pension funds to get enough money together to shore up collateral positions.

โ€œBy the end of the day (Monday) we were saying if this continues we are in serious trouble,โ€ one fund manager at a large British corporate pension scheme told Reuters.

โ€œBy Wednesday morning, we were saying this is a systemic problem. We were on the brink. It was like 2008 but on steroids because it happened so fast,โ€ the fund manager added.

BlackRock, another big LDI manager, told clients on Wednesday that it would not allow them to replenish the collateral needed to keep a position open, a note from BlackRock seen by Reuters shows.

BlackRock said in an emailed statement on Friday that it was cutting leverage in the funds and that it did not halt trading in them.

NOT OUT OF THE WOODS

The potential for the stress to cascade beyond pension funds and throughout Britainโ€™s financial industry was real. If the LDI funds defaulted on their positions, banks which had arranged the derivatives would be sucked in too.

The massive stress on a major economyโ€™s financial system made global waves, with even safe-haven US Treasuries and top-rated German bonds hit. Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic on Monday warned events in Britain could lead to greater economic stress in Europe and the United States.

While the BoE intervention sent yields plummeting, pushing the 30-year bond yield back to Sept. 23 levels and easing fears of an immediate crisis, fund managers, pensions experts and analysts say Britain is far from out of the woods.

No one knows how much the schemes will need to sell, and what will happen once the BoE stops buying bonds on Oct. 14.

Britainโ€™s central bank is now in the unenviable position of having postponed its plan to sell bonds, resulting in monetary loosening, and at the same time tightening with interest rates.

In November, it is expected to raise rates further and it has said it will stick to a plan to sell its bonds.

โ€œThe concern would be that the market sees this as something to be tested and I donโ€™t believe the Bank will want to set this precedent. This continues to leave long gilts vulnerable,โ€ said Orla Garvey, a fixed income manager at Federated Hermes.

Investor confidence has been shaken, not just in Britain.

โ€œThe situation in England is quite serious because 30 per cent of mortgages are heading toward variable rates,โ€ said billionaire investor Stanley Druckenmiller.

โ€œWhat you donโ€™t do is go and take taxpayer money and buy bonds at 4 per cent,โ€ said Druckenmiller. โ€œThis is creating long-term problems down the road.โ€

Standard & Poorโ€™s cut the outlook for its AA credit rating for British sovereign debt on Friday to โ€œnegativeโ€ from โ€œstableโ€, saying Trussโ€™s tax cut plans would cause debt to keep rising.

Meanwhile, demand for US dollars in currency derivative markets surged to its highest level since the height of the COVID-19 crisis in March 2020 on Friday, as the market turmoil sent investors in search of cash.

Ken Griffin, billionaire founder of Citadel Securities, one of the worldโ€™s biggest market-making firms, is concerned.

โ€œIt represents the first time weโ€™ve seen a major developed market, in a very long time, lose confidence from investors,โ€ Griffin told an investor conference in New York on Wednesday.

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