The U.K. on Wednesday became the latest country to sell bonds at negative interest rates, showing investor demand for government securities is so high than some are willing to pay for the privilege.
According to the Debt Management Office, the U.K. auctioned £3.75 billion ($ 4.6 billion) of 3-year TMBMKGB-03Y,
The bid-to-cover ratio was just 2.15, which was the lowest since March.
The negative-yielding bond auction came as the coronavirus pandemic crushes economies across the world. Data released earlier on Wednesday showed U.K. inflation at nearly a four-year low of just 0.8% in April.
Officials at the Bank of England, notably Gov. Andrew Bailey, have discussed the possibility of setting negative interest rates though it’s not seen as likely anytime soon.
“Lowering the bank rate to 0.1% was always likely to mean that gilt yields could dip below zero. In addition, demand from the BoE has outstripped the supply of new gilts, following £100 billion of quantitative easing in just two months. That is before considering that investors, worried about the economic shock and falling inflation, have also sought out safe haven assets recently,” said Oliver Blackbourn, multi-asset portfolio manager at Janus Henderson Investors.
According to data from Tradeweb as of the end of April, France had 1.4 trillion euros ($ 1.5 trillion) of debt outstanding with negative yields, and Germany had 1.24 trillion euros.
The FTSE 100 UKX,
Engine maker Rolls-Royce RR,