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Bank of England Governor Mark Carney relaxed over global bond sell-off

 

Ben Chu
Thursday 14 May 2015 00:42 BST
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Dramatic volatility in global bond markets, which has led to steep falls in the value of government bonds, should not be a cause for alarm, Bank of England Governor Mark Carney has said.

Ten-year government bond yields in the US, UK and Germany have all shot up by around 70 basis points this year, leaving City traders and analysts scratching their heads about the causes of the price fall and debating its economic significance. Around $400bn (£254bn) has been wiped off the value of global fixed-income markets in the past three weeks.

Unveiling the Bank’s quarterly inflation report, Mr Carney was sanguine about the sell-off, saying the view of the Monetary Policy Committee is that the sharp jump in yields, which move inversely to prices, probably represents a rational market correction rather than a panic that could threaten financial stability or choke off the economic recovery.

The Governor said the valuation of long-dated advanced country bonds had become extremely stretched earlier this year, with yields unnaturally compressed. “In terms of fundamentals it was not exactly clear why that had been the case, so it’s not exactly surprising that they’re moving back up,” he said.

“In the environment of a sustained global expansion, the extremes earlier this year would have been unlikely to be sustained.” He also stressed that the price of bonds was still historically very high, despite the recent sell-offs, and that market interest rates were, as a result, still highly stimulative. “If you look at the broad brush in terms of where the bond market is, even with the moves upwards, it is only partial retracement of moves over the course of the past year… Real interest rates are still flat to negative.”

The sell-off continued with German 10-year bund yields rising back above 0.7 per cent at one stage in trading, while 10-year gilt yields crept back above 2 per cent. US 10-year Treasury yields rose to 2.28 per cent.

City analysts have been debating whether “technical” factors, such as banks choosing to hold fewer sovereign bonds for regulatory reasons, or macroeconomic “fundamentals”, such as the improvement in the growth prospects for the eurozone, are driving the sovereign debt markets.

Mr Carney said that although there were always technical influences on bond markets, the Bank of England’s view on the correction was that it was “fundamentally driven”.

On the UK outlook, the Bank cut its growth forecasts for the next three years but the inflation report did not challenge market expectations that interest rates are likely to remain fixed at historic lows well into next year. The Bank now expects growth of 2.6 per cent this year, down from 2.9 per cent in February. Growth for 2016 is also revised down from 2.9 per cent to 2.6 per cent, and from 2.7 per cent to 2.5 per cent in 2017. The Bank said the revisions were driven by weaker expectations for productivity growth. The Bank stressed that the outlook for the UK “remains solid”.

The Office for National Statistics has reported that the number of people out of work between January and March fell to 1.83 million, down 35,000 from the previous quarter and the lowest for seven years. The jobless rate fell to 5.5 per cent.

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