KEY POINTS
  • To prevent an "unwarranted tightening of financing conditions and a reduction of the flow of credit to the real economy," the FPC said it would buy gilts on "whatever scale is necessary" for a limited time.
  • Central to the bank's extraordinary announcement was panic among pension funds, with some of the bonds held within them losing around half their value in a matter of days. 
  • Analysts are hoping that a further intervention from either Westminster or the City will help assuage the market's concerns, but until then, choppy waters are expected to persist.

LONDON – The Bank of England launched a historic intervention to stabilize the U.K. economy, announcing a two-week purchase program for long-dated bonds and delaying its planned gilt sales until the end of October.

The move came after a massive sell-off in U.K. government bonds — known as "gilts" — following the new government's fiscal policy announcements Friday. The policies included large swathes of unfunded tax cuts that have drawn global criticism, and also saw the pound fall to an all-time low against the dollar on Monday.