On 22 September 2022, Kwasi Kwarteng, then UK chancellor, announced a series of expansionary fiscal measures including some supply-side policies and tax cuts.1 These represented one of the largest tax giveaways in the last forty years at an estimated GBP 45 billion per year. Markets reacted negatively to the budget, with the 30-year gilt yield spiking 120 basis points over three days, one of the largest yield increases ever seen in such a short space of time. However, it was fuelled by more than just market reaction to the so-called “mini-budget”. A technicality in liability-driven investment (LDI) strategies adopted by pension funds was a key driving force behind the long-dated gilt selloff.
Defined benefit pensions are required to ensure that their assets can generate enough cash to meet their liabilities (monthly pay-outs guaranteed to pensioners). LDI strategies use derivatives to help many defined benefit pension funds match assets and liabilities to reduce the risk of shortfall caused by market volatility. Long-dated gilts are often used as the underlying assets in these derivatives. According to the Investment Association, the UK pensions market had total assets of GBP 4.2 trillion in 2021.2 Defined benefit pensions made up the highest proportion of this, with GBP 1.8 trillion in assets. LDI strategies accounted for around 38% of pension funds’ total assets, at GBP 1.6 trillion, equivalent to around two thirds of the UK’s GDP in 2021.
Pension funds have to post cash as collateral against their LDI derivatives in case their value declines. The amount of collateral required rises as the value of the underlying assets tracked by the derivatives falls. For example, estimates made in October 2019 suggest that a rise of 291 basis points in the long-dated gilt yield would have depleted all pension collateral in LDI schemes at that time.3
From 1 October 2019 to 22 September 2022, 30-year gilt yields rose 283 basis points (see Chart 1). In the three days following the mini-budget, the yield rose a further 120bps, implying pension funds had to raise cash to meet collateral calls. Many funds sold long-dated gilts to do this, which pushed yields up further, making hedging trades even more expensive and triggering a new round of collateral calls. The feedback loop of rising yields forcing LDI pension funds to sell gilts played a large part in the behaviour of the gilt market in the days following the mini-budget.