Tuesday, 14 June 2011

Special Liquidity Scheme repayments

From page 89 of the Markets & Operations chapter of The Bank of England's Quarterly Bulletin Q2 2011:

The Special Liquidity Scheme (SLS) was introduced in April 2008 to improve the liquidity position of the banking system by allowing banks and building societies to swap their high-quality mortgage-backed and other securities for UK Treasury bills for up to three years. The Scheme was designed to finance part of the overhang of illiquid assets on banks’ balance sheets by exchanging them temporarily for more easily tradable assets.

When the drawdown period for the SLS closed at the end of January 2009, £185 billion of UK Treasury bills had been lent under the SLS. In order to prevent a refinancing ‘cliff’, the Bank has held bilateral discussions with all users of the Scheme to ensure that there are plans in place to reduce their use of the Scheme in a smooth fashion... By end-May 2011, £148 billion had been repaid, compared with £94 billion at end-February 2011.


As I explained in October 2008 (I suppose I ought to update those workings), UK banks are raking in more than £100 bn a year in interest and mortgage repayments, they're paying out a smidge in deposit interest and lending precious little (which is good news for house prices). So they can use the rest to repay these soft loans from the government.

4 comments:

Ralph Musgrave said...

Taxpayer subsidies for banks are of equally scandalous proportions in Europe and America. For Europe, see here: http://blogs.reuters.com/great-debate/2009/07/28/europe-borrows-from-peter-to-lend-to-peter/

As to America, banks can borrow from government at near zero percent, and then buy government debt which yields about 3%. See: http://www.businessinsider.com/henry-blodget-wall-street-2010-5#ixzz0npcmAWA7

Re the UK, the banks bought a very large chunk of a recent Gilt issue.

Mark Wadsworth said...

RM, taxpayer subsidies for UK banks were outrageous, but it appears that the Lib-Cons are doing the decent thing and asking banks to repay as planned.

According to most recent BoE balance sheet, 'reserves' (i.e. deposits which commercial banks made with BoE) are down to £129 billion, as against £149 billion a year ago, maybe they are just netting off the two (as any sensible bookkeeper would).

AntiCitizenOne said...

Liquidity must be a term that means pretend they're not insolvent...

Mark Wadsworth said...

AC1, good point.