Investment Newsletter July 2017
Interes-tin anniversary
Mike Deverell Investment Manager
The 5th July 2017 saw an unusual milestone for the Bank of England.
and US rates also remained at near zero until very recently.
A decade earlier, the Bank had announced that interest rates would increase from 5.5% to 5.75% following their most recent Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting. Incredibly, July 2007 was the last time the official UK base rate went up, meaning rates have just celebrated their 10th anniversary, traditionally symbolised by tin, of no increases. This means there are many relatively experienced financial services professionals who have never experienced a rate rise in their entire career!
Those low rates were designed to help the global economy recover from the near collapse of the financial system in 2008. Low rates are meant to work by stimulating borrowing and discouraging excess savings. However, even this was not enough stimulus and since then various central banks have also carried out vast amounts of quantitative easing (QE).
As we know, the following year saw the financial crisis and rates were reduced down to the then record of 0.5% in late 2008. Other central banks followed suit
A decade since the last rate rise and the Bank is now seriously considering putting rates back up. At the last meeting of the MPC four of the nine members voted to increase rates from the 0.25% level they have been since just after the EU referendum, back up to 0.5%.
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