The Bank of England cut interest rates by 50 basis points this afternoon to a record low of 0.5 per cent, and said it would buy assets worth £75 billion to help the British economy by expanding the money supply.
Announcing the start of "quantitative easing" measures employed when rates get near to their minimum, the Bank said the likely majority of purchases over the next three months would be gilts (UK government bonds) at medium and long maturities.
Gilts soared on the announcement, with the June future rallying more than 2.50 full points, while sterling fell against the dollar.
The latest rate reduction means the BoE has now cut interest rates for six months running by a total of 4.5 percentage points as Britain struggles with its first recession since the early 1990s.
The Bank said it would monitor the effectiveness of the asset buying programme at its future meetings.
The government has given the BoE permission to buy as much as £150 billion' worth of assets with newly-created money. This figure also includes £50 billion set aside in the government's asset purchase facility that hitherto would have been funded by the issue of Treasury bills.
The latest reduction in interest rates would itself leave a substantial risk of inflation undershooting the two percent target in two years' time. But the BoE added it was also concerned that a low level of interest rates could be counterproductive for some markets.
"It is in line with expectations. The decision to embark on an asset purchase of £75 billion is obviously the right move," said Amit Kara, UK economist at UBS. "We think it is a start and will probably end up double the size, probably over the course of the year."
Reuters