http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2009/mar/25/uk-economic-rescue-in-crisisEfforts to rescue the UK economy were plunged into fresh uncertainty this morning after the government failed to find a buyer for some of its debt, the first such failure in seven years.
City dealers blamed Mervyn King, the Bank of England's governor, for sowing confusion after he warned earlier this week that the UK could not afford another stimulus package.
The UK debt management office said it attracted just £1.62bn of bids for a sale of £1.75bn of 40-year gilts. Normally, such auctions of government debt are oversubscribed. This was the first failure of an auction since 2002.
Analysts warned that it cast doubts on the government's ability to borrow billions of pounds to stimulate British economic activity.
William Hague, standing in for David Cameron at prime minister's questions today, said investors were no longer interested in holding UK government debt, and claimed the government had lost control of the public finances.
Deputy Labour leader Harriet Harman denied that there was a general problem in the gilt market.
The Bank of England had begun buying up gilts and corporate debt through its quantitative easing (QE) programme, which is designed to boost the money supply and get the economy going again.
But on Monday King suggested that the Bank might not need to create the full £75bn assigned to QE.
"This is a direct result of yesterday: the fact that this gilt auction has failed means that we're just not getting the benefits of QE. Mervyn King was never a big convert," said Graham Turner, analyst at GFC Economics.
"The bond market is just failing – investors can see there's a row between King and the government, and he's not committed. This is the problem with trying to run a separate monetary and fiscal policy," Turner added, referring to King's other remark on Monday that there was little room for the government to engage in further fiscal easing.
The gilts market has been alarmed by King's comments, as demand for gilts will be hit if the Bank buys fewer than planned. Bond prices plunged this morning and look to be on course to record their biggest weekly loss in at least six years. As a result of falling prices, yields (income relative to price) shot higher.
"I just think there's a state of confusion in the market at the moment. It requires greater clarity from the Bank on what its aims are in this process," said Sean Maloney, strategist at Nomura International.
More than half the big fall in gilt yields since the Bank announced its QE programme has now been reversed. A key aim of QE was to push down yields, thus reducing further borrowing costs in the economy.