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UK investors see 113 billion pounds of BoE bond sales by 2025

Published by Wanda Rich

Posted on March 18, 2022

2 min read

· Last updated: February 8, 2026

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Bank of England building with financial charts representing bond sales - Global Banking & Finance Review
Image of the Bank of England building, symbolizing the projected 113 billion pounds in bond sales by 2025 as discussed in the article. This highlights the central bank's strategy on government bonds.
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By David Milliken LONDON (Reuters) – Bond market experts expect the Bank of England to sell 113 billion pounds ($148 billion) of government bonds over the next three years, on top of 150 billion maturing from its 875 billion pound stockpile, a BoE survey showed on Friday. Britain’s central bank announced last month that […]

By David Milliken

LONDON (Reuters) – Bond market experts expect the Bank of England to sell 113 billion pounds ($148 billion) of government bonds over the next three years, on top of 150 billion maturing from its 875 billion pound stockpile, a BoE survey showed on Friday.

Britain’s central bank announced last month that it would begin to unwind its bond purchases for the first time since it launched quantitative easing in 2009, starting with an immediate end to the reinvestment of gilts which mature.

The central bank has said it will consider active bond sales once it has raised Bank Rate to 1%, which financial markets expect to take place after the BoE’s next meeting in May.

The BoE survey of 31 market participants, just before 28 billion pounds of its gilts were due to mature, showed a sharp increase in bond sale expectations since the last survey in late January.

The median expectation for active sales over the next 12 months is 35 billion pounds, rising to a cumulative 70 billion pounds by March 2024 and 113 billion pounds by March 2025.

Sales were expected to start just after the BoE’s Sept. 15 meeting, although a minority thought the sales could begin as soon as late June or July.

In January, markets expected no active sales over the next 12 months, 25 billion pounds of sales in the 12 months after and a cumulative 50 billion pounds within three years.

Governor Andrew Bailey has said he does not expect the gradual sales to have much impact on the economy or on yields, as the 440 billion pounds of purchases during the COVID-19 pandemic largely served to stabilise turbulent markets.

But with the BoE currently holding just over half the stock of British government bonds in issue, Bailey sees a reduction in gilt holdings as desirable if the central bank is to provide support in a future crisis.

The BoE will use interest rates as its main tool to control inflation, which it expects to hit a 30-year high of around 8% next month and potentially rise further.

($1 = 0.7613 pounds)

(Reporting by David Milliken, editing by Andy Bruce)

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Bank of England?
The Bank of England is the central bank of the United Kingdom, responsible for issuing currency, managing monetary policy, and maintaining financial stability.
What is the Bank Rate?
The Bank Rate is the interest rate at which the central bank lends money to commercial banks, influencing overall interest rates in the economy.
What is inflation?
Inflation is the rate at which the general level of prices for goods and services rises, eroding purchasing power.
What are fixed income securities?
Fixed income securities are investment instruments that provide returns in the form of regular, fixed payments and the eventual return of principal at maturity.

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