"Short View: Who foots the bill?
By John Authers, Investment editor
Published: March 25 2009 19:22 | Last updated: March 25 2009 19:22
Who is going to pay? Most of the world’s major economies are trying to spend their way out of the sudden collapse in financial activity using borrowed money. While contentious, there are ample defences for this policy.
But working out who pays is a harder question, which will be aired when the G20 heads of state meet in London next week. The air is thick with verbal barbs – from the Chinese central bank’s interest in a new reserve currency, to the Czech prime minister’s anger with the US deficit. Wednesday showed that the market is listening.
First, the auction of 40-year gilts in the UK saw the first “failure” since 2002. In other words, it was undersubscribed, with bids only for 93 per cent of the bonds on offer. The instant response was as though the UK could not fund its deficit, as the Bank of England warned this week.
The yield on 10-year gilts rose from 3.35 per cent to 3.53 per cent – almost back to where it was before the BoE said two weeks ago it would buy gilts. Then the BoE bought some gilts, and the yield came all the way down to 3.27 per cent.
Auction failures are not unprecedented, and the extreme reaction showed that investors are nervous.
Sterling barely moved on these developments. Instead, it rose and fell on comments by Tim Geithner, the US Treasury secretary. He said first that he was “open” to China’s proposal that the dollar should be superseded as the reserve currency. Minutes later he said he expected the dollar to be the reserve currency “for a long time”. Between his comments, the dollar dropped by 1.1 per cent, and then rebounded.
Again this is about who pays. If the US inflates out of the crisis, and the dollar falls, those holding assets in dollars will lose and, in effect, pay the bill. That is why politicians are talking so much about these issues. With markets scared, they should mind their words."
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