I often hear people complain about the end of defined benefit pensions, but this is what inevitably always happens. There will be essentially bailouts, printing billions, leading to inflation, weakening the currency. Why? Because someone made an irresponsible promise to someone 30 years ago knowing they won't be around when it hits the fan. And now we all have to rearrange out entire economic system to accommodate them. And these people are all gone by now, no one to hold responsible. What would responsibility even look like? Firing someone?
I won't be there - You won't be there
literally meaning, the due date for these loans and the trouble they are making, will occur after you and I, fellow white collar worker, will be long gone.
In the years following those famous financial events, a large scale opioid medication abuse pattern emerged across the USA. What could be clearer in hindsight?
some people refused to participate, and some people profited, and far, far more people were financially damaged in a way that lingers today in the USA and elsewhere.
You seem to misunderstand and think those people that promoted those things are already dead. They aren't. Its why they continue pushing for the bailouts. They've held onto power, and the cohort is starting to crumble.
You can't fire anyone in government, its a longstanding structural issue with why it underperforms in just about every way.
This is a comforting thought, but no. It isn't. These are complex, dynamic systems with emergent properties navigating a landscape which is itself complex and dynamic.
Can someone more financially literate than me explain how BoE buying government bonds is going to restore financial stability? Will it slow down the falling pound? Will it reduce inflation? What mechanisms are at work here?
The BoE buying these bonds applies the brakes on bond prices and "restores financial stability".
One other note: They could also be holding these bonds themselves on leverage. They could be asked to post cash as collateral for these bonds(which are now essentially risky assets).
Why do the pension funds (and other institutional investors) need to post collateral? Where do the pension funds post their collateral to?
I guess I will understand why collateral is required if you can explain me what would go wrong if the pension funds were not made to post collateral.
No. Apparently the BoE is worried about other things right now, rather than inflation.
Which sounds pretty bad, because it seemed like inflation should be the #1 concern right now. But BoE has other economic data and are clearly worried about something else...
> Can someone more financially literate than me explain how BoE buying government bonds is going to restore financial stability?
Nominally, you'd do this if you were worried about deflation. I don't know what kind of economic data suggests deflation right now though...
Like some clod announcing they're going to decimate revenue by cutting taxes for their rich mates and plug the hole by massively increasing borrowing?
This is the opposite of what you would do if you want to reduce inflation. You're inserting more money into the system and removing IOUs (debt). Originally BoE was concerned about inflation but now they're moving against what they deem a bigger threat, big banks and pension funds are in financial trouble
It also shifts the discussion from "what's causing the fall of the pound and the rise of long term rates" to "what will be the effect of this new round of QE?"
To get a better picture, take a broader view. This move comes as all of the world's currencies are falling against the dollar. Why?
This article might be helpful:
And what's the problem with increasing interest rates? Is it that rising interest rates makes new businesses difficult to borrow money? And difficulty in borrowing money leads to shrinking economy?
They probably justified that they had to do it because once you get into a deflationary cycle it feeds on itself. There have already been a number of policy mistakes worldwide (ECB did the same thing early on). This is just a drop in the bucket.
1. Buying bonds pushes the price of bonds up (pretty basic, right?)
2. Bonds have a constant interest payment, so if you buy a higher priced bond, the size of that return as a % of what you paid (yield) is smaller.
3. When you evaluate risky[0] securities (company stocks and bonds) or other risky financial investments, you compare them with something risk-free[1] like government bonds.
4. More specifically, to determine how much something is worth now, you calculate Net Present Value (NPV) using the Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) method. This is the method that all serious financial companies employ[2] on some level to determine the prices of things.
5. NPV is the sum of each (future cash flow / (1 + discount rate)^t) where t=compounding periods (typically years) and the discount rate is the benchmark rate that you're comparing to.
6. Hence, if you are using government bond yields as the discount rate in your calculation, if the yield goes down, your NPV goes up. So by lowering government bond yields, you help support the price of financial assets.
7. If you are not familiar with finance, you may be inclined to ask "hold on that seems like it supports stock prices not the actual economy" "what about the value of money?" "what about the quality of activity being supported?" "once you start, how do you stop?". Interfering with the 'natural' rate of interest on benchmark securities was and remains a hotly contested topic, however it has been accepted as a status quo method in western economies that feature a central bank.
[0] not risky as in Gamestop, but risky as in 'any investment that could possibly go badly'
[1] We generally treat US treasuries, and sovereign debt for stable countries like the UK and Germany as 'risk-free'. If these borrowers ever default, we probably have bigger problems to deal with than the valuation of Coca-Cola.
[2] Lots of valuations are not calculated using DCF, companies often just use comparables and 'multiples' (literally just value something by saying it's "10x earnings/ebitda (current period cash flow)". However, this is mostly just companies that need to make lots of valuation calls very quickly and off-the-cuff. Generally speaking DCF is the 'fundamental theory' of valuation, and then other more or less complex models are built off of its ideas. I.E. adding coefficients of probabilities, what-if scenarios, etc to future cash flows.
[3] which is possible given I'm laughably unemployed
Gallows humour.
Not sure what happened if he got ousted or what but that was a huge mistake on their part. They seem to be realizing their mistake now.