The UK bond market is testing pension funds once again. A sharp selloff in government gilts is triggering fresh cash calls for pension schemes, but this time, the market is avoiding a repeat of the infamous 2022 meltdown.
📉 THE MACRO CATALYST:
- The Inflation Scare: UK government bond yields have surged recently, driven by reignited global inflation worries tied to the ongoing Iran war.
- The Target: This jump in borrowing costs is directly testing the derivative positions held by pension schemes, specifically Liability-Driven Investments (LDI).
🛡️ THE IMPACT & THE DEFENSE:
- Limited Cash Calls: Pensions consultancies XPS and Mercer confirmed that a small number of clients have been forced to meet cash/margin calls on their LDI positions this month to cover the gaps.
- The 2022 Contrast: In 2022, a sudden yield spike under Liz Truss’s ‘mini-budget’ triggered a catastrophic firesale of assets, forcing emergency Bank of England intervention.
- The Structural Reforms: Why is it different today? Following the 2022 crisis, LDI funds were forced to drastically reduce their leverage and hold significantly larger liquid asset buffers. Furthermore, the current selloff is more concentrated in shorter-dated gilts, which are less commonly pooled by LDIs.
💡 THE BOTTOM LINE: The post-2022 financial reforms are working exactly as intended. While margin calls are happening, the deleveraged LDI market is absorbing the shock in an orderly fashion. However, as Mercer’s UK CIO warned, if yields continue their relentless climb, we will likely see multiple managers making capital calls. The systemic risk has been mitigated, but the stress test is far from over.
👇 Fixed Income & Macro Investors: Are the current liquidity buffers in UK pension funds robust enough to handle a sustained, war-driven inflation shock, or is the Bank of England still the ultimate backstop?
