Archives of “May 2020” month
rssBank of England looking more urgently at negative rates
The Bank of England is looking more urgently at options such as negative interest rates and buying riskier assets to prop up the country’s economy as it slides into a deep coronavirus slump, the BoE’s chief economist was quoted as saying.
The Telegraph newspaper said the economist, Andy Haldane, refused to rule out the possibility of taking interest rates below zero and buying lower-quality financial assets under the central bank’s bond-buying programme.
“The economy is weaker than a year ago and we are now at the effective lower bound, so in that sense it’s something we’ll need to look at – are looking at – with somewhat greater immediacy,” he said in an interview. “How could we not be?”
Top BoE officials have previously expressed objections to taking rates below zero – as the central banks of the euro zone and Japan have done – because it might hinder the ability of banks in Britain to lend and hurt rather than help the economy.
But with the BoE’s benchmark at an all-time low of 0.1% and Britain facing potentially its sharpest economic downturn in 300 years, talk of cutting rates to below zero has resurfaced.
Governor Andrew Bailey said on Thursday the BoE was not contemplating negative rates, but he declined to rule it out altogether.
Why short selling works better than buying stocks
Anybody can do this from home to you
Germany’s Weber: European Union should impose a temporary ban on Chinese takeovers
German EU parliamentarian Manfred Weber says he is in favor of declaring a twelve-month ban for Chinese investors who want to buy European firms.
- Weber is a senior German conservative and heads the centre-right EPP grouping in the EU Parliament
- EU should impose a temporary ban on Chinese takeovers of companies that are currently undervalued or have business problems because of the coronavirus crisis
- “We have to see that Chinese companies, partly with the support of state funds, are increasingly trying to buy up European companies that are cheap to acquire or that got into economic difficulties due to the coronavirus crisis”
- EU should react in a coordinated way
- “We have to protect ourselves”

Life in the nutshell 👊
Bank of Canada…
Saudi sovereign wealth fund has bought a big stake Boeing
Saudi Arabia’s $300 billion sovereign-wealth fund has invested further into US corporations.
Q1 figures from the Public Investment Fund show fresh stakes taken in:
- Facebook, Disney , Marriott, Cisco Systems, Citigroup, Bank of America, & Boeing
(and others). The stake in Boeing was circa $714 million.
With oil prices weaker Saudi is accelerating diversification, buying in during Q1:
- “We actively seek strategic opportunities both in Saudi Arabia and globally that have strong potential to generate significant long-term returns while further benefiting the people of Saudi Arabia and driving the country’s economic growth”
From filings with the US SEC, via a WSJ report, link is here for more (the Journal may be gated)

Fitch affirms France rating at ‘AA’ but lower its outlook from stable to negative
Fitch Ratings has affirmed France at ‘AA’ but cites (amongst other factors) the substantial worsening in public finances and economic activity expected this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic for its lowering of the outlook to negative.
- The combination of much reduced economic activity due to containment measures introduced from March and government policies to support the economy in the period of enforced reduced activity will sharply increase government borrowing and indebtedness. This deterioration of France’s public finance metrics will happen in the context of already high debt levels in comparison with rating peers, limited progress in fiscal consolidation since the global financial crisis, and moderate real economic growth.
That’s a summary, the report also notes:
- France’s ratings are underpinned by a large, wealthy and diversified economy, strong and effective civil and social institutions and a track record of macro-financial stability. Public finances, and particularly the high level of government debt, remain a rating weakness relative to the ‘AA’ category.
More at that link above
