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Boris Johnson’s Splurge Gets Green Light From Investors

U.K. Prime Minister Gets The Green Light For A Splurge From Investors

Boris Johnson’s Splurge Gets Green Light From Investors
Boris Johnson, U.K. Prime Minister, Speaks During Their Meeting Inside Number 10 Downing Street In London, U.K. (Photographer: Andy Rain/EPA/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- The bond market is signaling approval of U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s planned spending spree.

With the March 11 budget looming into view, the average cost of government borrowing is close to the lowest levels on record. That’s even with Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak expected to announce billions of pounds of extra spending as the nation leaves the European Union.

Boris Johnson’s Splurge Gets Green Light From Investors

Investors are so relaxed about the prospect of extra borrowing that it took the news of Sunak replacing Sajid Javid last week -- a move expected to lead to an even more expansionary budget -- with barely a ripple.

Indeed, rather than trying to clip the government’s fiscal wings, investors have increased its ability to spend. The rally in gilts since the last fiscal event in March has driven down the cost of debt servicing and created an extra 5 billion pounds ($6 billion) of headroom for the Chancellor by 2024, according to calculations by Bloomberg Economics’s Dan Hanson.

That move higher in gilts came even after an election campaign that saw both main parties promise to open the fiscal taps, and suggests that so-called bond vigilantes -- often summoned up in arguments against fiscal largess -- are giving the U.K. a pass.

“The bond vigilante is dead,” said Kacper Brzezniak, a portfolio manager at Allianz Global Investors, which is currently neutral on gilts. “One of the crazy things about all this focus on debt is that we have seen missed opportunities to take advantage of low yields.”

That’s good news for Johnson as he looks to increase investment in infrastructure dramatically, partly in an attempt to cement support among working-class voters in northern England and the Midlands who backed the Conservatives for the first time in the general election.

Funding Growth

Sunak’s budget will be the first to give a boost to economic growth since the financial crisis, the Resolution Foundation said in a report Thursday.

Even before the more fiscally conservative Javid quit weeks before he was due to deliver his first budget, doubts were growing that the U.K. could keep to its promise to balance day-to-day government outlays. Bloomberg Economics puts the chance of the current budget staying in surplus in three years at little more than 30%.

One potential risk for bonds is that the extra spending boosts demand in the economy to the extent it overheats, prompting the Bank of England to tighten policy in order to control inflation. That’s particularly a problem given that the BOE’s view of the economy’s potential growth -- the rate at which it can grow without fueling price rises -- has been cut to around 1%, well below the government’s 2.8% goal.

Still, with much of the extra funding focused on infrastructure, which should boost productivity, the budget may prompt a reassessment of the economy’s supply potential -- giving the BOE more leeway to keep rates low. Money markets indicate an 80% chance that the BOE will lower interest rates by a quarter point by the end of the year.

Long-Term Risks

For now, rather than being spooked, the bond market is being propped up by longer-term expectations that inflation will remain tepid. The looming risks to global growth posed by the coronavirus underpin the view that BOE interest rates will stay near record lows.

Meanwhile, persistent demand from pension funds helps keep a lid on yields, while there’s also evidence that foreign buyers are supporting the market. BOE data show non-resident’s net purchases of gilts in 2019 were the highest since before the referendum.

The average yield on the Bloomberg Barclays gilt index is around 0.8%, close to the record low of just under 0.6% reached last year. Meanwhile, the yield on 10-year gilts is lower than Feb. 12, the day before Javid’s departure.

“A big increase in supply does not have to result in a meaningful shift lower in the price,” wrote Daniela Russell, the head of HSBC’s U.K. rates strategy, who estimates the supply of gilts will rise by 18.1 billion pounds ($23 billion) to 154.9 billion pounds in 2020-2021. “Yields should stay low, particularly those at the front-end, anchored by a dovish outlook for monetary policy.” Russell forecasts the yield on 10-year gilts to drop to 0.40% by year-end, from 0.58% currently.

To contact the reporters on this story: David Goodman in London at dgoodman28@bloomberg.net;James Hirai in London at jhirai3@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Paul Gordon at pgordon6@bloomberg.net, Brian Swint, Anil Varma

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