It's owned by the government (well technically the Treasury Solicitor), but it is not the governement. It's wholly independent.
Yes, but I can guarantee you, goverment could ask for the bank to do something. It still backed by us the tax payer.
It's owned by the government (well technically the Treasury Solicitor), but it is not the governement. It's wholly independent.
It's owned by the government (well technically the Treasury Solicitor), but it is not the governement. It's wholly independent.
They're not, they're paying market value for them.
I dont have a mortage I couldnt afford the deposit on my own,
I can show you what industry Britain has and that is warehousing.
I drive past a few places that use to employ people now its just to let, to let, to let.
example
That was about 2 years ago. Same area that my biked got nicked outside a gym in the middle of the day 3 weeks ago.
Not jobs, no hope, no councils house but plenty of iPhone 4s![]()
Yes, market value, which the government is then also selling into.When you buy something in mass, it increases it's price. Once the demand stops, it falls back down.
No they can't.Yes, but I can guarantee you, goverment could ask for the bank to do something.
Yes, market value, which the government is then also selling into.
No they can't.
Central Bank is owned by goverment, we don't have the american system.
[TW]Fox;20318574 said:It is an independant public organisation. I suggest you google it to find out more if you dont understand what that means - effectively it means regardless of who technically owns it, it acts on its own and not through the instruction of government.
[TW]Fox;20318455 said:See what I mean? There is much confusion amongst most people about what is actually going on. How can people protest against something few of them understand? It makes no sense. Most of them are there because somebody on Facebook told them go to and they thought it would be cool - 20somethings have railed against the establishment for decades...
They can ask, but the BoE will ignore them. They are independent, interest rates and QE are reviewed by the board of governors and are voted upon based on the state of the economy of the day.Not force but ask.
Yes the goverment will supply more, decreasing the price. The funds won't buy back instantly, usally wait until its finished QE, so demand falls down.
You don't have to fully understand something to see that the effects it has are bad.
They can ask, but the BoE will ignore them. They are independent, interest rates and QE are reviewed by the board of governors and are voted upon based on the state of the economy of the day.
Demand for government gilts has not fallen at all, indeed the rates our government are paying for them are some of the lowest in the world, because we're viewed as being one of the most secure and safest governments to invest in long term.
Sorry I don't think you understand my point. Demand for UK gilts has gone through the roof, forcing the cost of them to the government down, not up.Yes, because we are still buying them. When you buy something, espcially 75 bil worth its going to increase the price.
When QE ends, its going to decrease the price, at which point the pension funds buy more for the same money they sold them at.
When they shrink it, it'll cause deflationary pressure, that's good for the consumer. Also funds are owned by anyone and everyone so what's the problem?When BOE shrink the money supply again, I don't think its the banks or funds loosing out![]()
Sorry I don't think you understand my point. Demand for UK gilts has gone through the roof, forcing the cost of them to the government down, not up.
Sorry I don't think you understand my point. Demand for UK gilts has gone through the roof, forcing the cost of them to the government down, not up.
When they shrink it, it'll cause deflationary pressure, that's good for the consumer. Also funds are owned by anyone and everyone so what's the problem?
Selling government debt works in completely the opposite way to what you think. When there is demand for government debt, it forces the cost down. The UK has some of the most in demand debt in the world because we're seen as being a safe haven for investment in relation to other governments debt. Compare us with Spain and Greece, the interest they pay on their soverign debt has sky rocketed because they need to pay more interest to generate enough demand from investors because of the risk they represent.When demand goes, price goes up.
Goverment buys bond from open markets at high price. 75 bil worth of bonds
being braught will also increase price for goverment.
Funds sell the bonds for the high price.
QE stops, demand goes down, price goes down.
Funds buy more bonds, for the same money.
Goverment can issue bonds for cheaper, not buy them for cheaper.
I'm talking about how financial companies can abuse QE.
Sorry but hedge funds are just another investment tool that pension funds use, albeit a higher risk one compared to goverment bonds.Nope hedge funds are not for everyone. And managers get a lot of the gains, not investors through performance bonuses.
Nope hedge funds are not for everyone. And managers get a lot of the gains, not investors through performance bonuses.
Selling government debt works in completely the opposite way to what you think. When there is demand for government debt, it forces the cost down. The UK has some of the most in demand debt in the world because we're seen as being a safe haven for investment in relation to other governments debt. Compare us with Spain and Greece, the interest they pay on their soverign debt has sky rocketed because they need to pay more interest to generate enough demand from investors because of the risk they represent.
Because of the demand for our debt, we can offer it at much lower interest rates. More demand = lower cost!
Sorry but hedge funds are just another investment tool that pension funds use, albeit a higher risk one compared to goverment bonds.