Bank of England rebuilds stimulus war chest with an extra £100bn

BoE keeps benchmark interest rate at 0.1% as it increases bond purchase programme

The Bank of England is using its bond-buying programme as its main policy tool as it tries to help steer Britain’s economy away from a record 25 per cent slump in March and April.
The Bank of England is using its bond-buying programme as its main policy tool as it tries to help steer Britain’s economy away from a record 25 per cent slump in March and April.

The Bank of England increased its bond-buying programme by £100 billion on Thursday as it sought to help steer the economy away from a record slump in March and April caused by the coronavirus lockdown.

The BoE kept its benchmark interest rate at 0.1 per cent.

Eight members of the nine-strong monetary policy committee voted to increase the bond-purchase programme, with only the bank's chief economist Andy Haldane voting for no increase.

All nine members voted to keep the benchmark rate unchanged.

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The central bank said it would spend all the extra £100 billion on government bonds but would slow the pace of its purchases, saying it expected the new total £745 billion target would be hit by the end of the year.

A Reuters poll of economists had pointed to a £100 billion increase in the asset purchase programme and bank rate remaining at 0.1 per cent.

The bank is using its bond-buying programme as its main policy tool as it tries to help steer Britain’s economy away from a record 25 per cent slump in March and April.

There was no mention of the negative interest rates – an option the central bank has said it will consider – in the minutes of the BoE’s policy meeting. – Reuters