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  2. United Kingdom national debt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Kingdom_national_debt

    The United Kingdom national debt is the total quantity of money borrowed by the Government of the United Kingdom at any time through the issue of securities by the British Treasury and other government agencies. At the end of March 2023, UK general government gross debt was £2,537.0 billion, or 100.5% gross domestic product. [2]

  3. Big year of central bank easing wraps up with dovish ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/big-central-bank-easing-wraps...

    The more dovish tone sparked a rally in UK government bond prices, pushing yields down. Still, markets price in less than a 50% chance of a 25-bps rate cut when the BoE next meets in February. 8 ...

  4. Britain's bond market turmoil - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/britains-bond-market-turmoil...

    * The Bank of England has been forced into emergency bond-buying to stem a sharp sell-off in Britain's 2.1 trillion pound ($2.3 trillion) government bond market that threatens to wreak havoc in ...

  5. Gilt-edged securities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilt-edged_securities

    The UK's Debt Management Office (DMO) plans to sell £15bn of green gilts this year. The 12-year bond will mature in July 2033, and is priced at a yield of about 0.9 percent. The money raised by the bonds are earmarked for environmental spending, such as on projects including flood defences, renewable energy, or carbon capture and storage. [14]

  6. Monetary Policy Committee (United Kingdom) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monetary_Policy_Committee...

    By March 2009, faced with very low levels on inflation and interest rates already at 0.5%, the MPC voted to start the process of quantitative easing (QE) – the injection of money directly into the economy – via the APF. It had the Bank buy government bonds , along with a smaller amount of high-quality debt issued by private companies. [7]

  7. Premium Bonds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Premium_Bonds

    The bonds are entered in a monthly prize draw and the government promises to buy them back, on request, for their original price. The government pays interest into the bond fund (4.15% per annum in December 2024 but decreasing to 4% in January 2025) [1] from which a monthly lottery distributes tax-free prizes to bondholders whose numbers are ...

  8. Index-linked Savings Certificates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Index-linked_Savings...

    The bond terms are typically 2, 3 or 5 years. The returns are linked to Retail Price Index (RPI) with a tiny added interest rate on top. The Bonds can no only be cashed in at maturity. Index-linked Savings Certificates are free from UK income tax making them relatively attractive to tax-payers, particularly higher rate tax-payers. They are ...

  9. Higher energy bills push UK inflation to 6-month high in October

    www.aol.com/higher-energy-bills-push-uk...

    The Office for National Statistics said higher domestic energy bills pushed up consumer price inflation up to 2.3% in the year to October from the three-year low of 1.7% recorded the previous month.