A commuter passes the Royal Exchange and the Bank of England (BOE) in the City of London, UK, on Monday Oct. 3, 2022. Traders are the most negative ever on the pounds prospects, even after the UK government scrapped one of its new tax policies, a sign it will take a bigger policy U-turn to restore credibility with markets. Photographer: Carlos Jasso/Bloomberg
Locked
UK pension fund selling stokes fear across bond markets
UK pensions are selling to meet margin calls on derivatives they used to help ensure they could keep paying retirees even if interest rates changed, using a technique called liability-driven investing.
By Neil Callanan and Jack Pitcher
(Bloomberg) — UK pension funds are dumping assets to meet margin calls as the Bank of England confirmed it will end its emergency bond buying program, with the reverberations being felt everywhere from Sydney to Frankfurt and New York.
In the US, investment-grade corporate bonds are falling, with average prices of around 86 cents on the dollar on Wednesday compared with 90 cents about three weeks ago. UK pension funds have contributed to the selling pressure in recent days, according to one Wall Street trading desk.
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