Bank of England explains rejected offers at gilt buy-backs

Reuters

Published Oct 05, 2022 14:59

LONDON (Reuters) - The Bank of England gave more detail on Wednesday about why it rejects offers at its new daily operations to buy up to 5 billion pounds ($5.65 billion) of long-dated gilts, after accepting almost none on Monday and Tuesday.

The BoE launched the temporary purchase programme for long-dated gilts on Sept. 28 after 30-year gilts suffered their biggest daily price falls on record, pushing yields to a 20-year high above 5% and threatening the stability of some pension funds and the broader economy.

The announcement led to 30-year yields falling below 4%, but at its first five auctions the BoE bought less than 4 billion pounds of gilts out of a potential 25 billion pounds, and 30-year yields have crept up to almost 4.2%.

The BoE accepted none of the 2.23 billion pounds of gilts it was offered on Tuesday, and just 22 million pounds' worth on Monday.

The BoE has said from the start that its purchases are subject to a reserve price, which is not public before the auction, and that it aims to be a backstop to ensure financial stability, rather than to cap yields at a particular level.

On Wednesday, the BoE spelled out the mechanism by which it decides which offers to accept.

"The Bank's allocation methodology is not based on absolute price or yield, or the identity of the seller," it said.

"The Bank allocates or rejects each offer by comparing the spread between the yield it is offered and market mid-yields at the end of the auction, with the Bank's reserve spread. Offers below the reserve spread are rejected," it added.