Stumuz2 wrote: ↑29 Sep 2022, 17:04
UndercoverElephant wrote: ↑29 Sep 2022, 16:36
clv101 wrote: ↑29 Sep 2022, 10:03
My understanding is that the BoE has pledged £65bn to buy government bonds, effectively providing a price floor. This is important as the price was falling so much that that the pension funds which owned and used these bonds as collateral to raise further funds risked becoming insolvent, being forced to sell bonds, take the loss, further depressing values in a horrible feedback.
The intervention stopped this, but leaves BoE with a lot of over priced bonds. Handily Kwarteng and the Treasury have indemnified the bank of any falls in value of the bonds so the eventual losses still with the taxpayer.
Well, Stumuzz claims the money was used to inflate pension assets, not to buy government bonds. My understanding is the same as yours, oddly enough. The money was printed and given to the government in order to prop up the value of bonds, because nobody else was willing to buy that debt at the price the government wanted to sell it. The goal may well have been to prevent pension assets from falling, but the reason the government needs to borrow that money is because it is giving that sort of money away in tax cuts to the rich.
Chaotic thinking.
Strict rationalism, actually.
Without a shadow of doubt, pension companies got a margin call (give me money now)
The pension funds had to sell assets to pay their debts to pay the margin call.
If they sold their assets, the pension companies were bust, bankrupt, in the sh&t, out of business.
So the government/BoE bought the assets at inflated prices with printed currency.
And you continue to ignore the elephant in the room, which is that the only reason the pension companies got margin calls was because the pound was crashing, and the reason the pound was crashing was the government has recklessly promised a massive tax cut, mainly for the very rich.
You can refuse to acknowledge the root cause all day, but that won't stop it being the root cause. If the pound had been crashing because of reasons out of the government's control, or because there was some pressing, morally-defensible reason for what they were doing, then maybe you'd have a point, but neither is true. The government caused this situation to occur, and it did so in order to benefit the very rich.
Truss and Kwarteng: "The solution is to cut taxes, especially for rich people. Now, what is the problem?"
"We fail to mandate economic sanity because our brains are addled by....compassion." (Garrett Hardin)