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Investors stockpile cash to offset economic despair

August has so far been notable for yet another set of bizarre market signals. Last week the Bank of England cut rates from 0.5 per cent to a record low of 0.25 per cent and pledged to introduce a £70bn quantitative easing programme.

In the wake of that, yields on sovereign debt in the UK, Ireland and Spain have tumbled to record lows: the rate on benchmark 10-year gilts is now a mere 0.56 per cent [cut: 0.51 per cent]while short-term notes have turned negative.

More startling still, the total global volume of sovereign and corporate bonds with negative nominal yields last week rose above $12.6tn, according to data assembled for the Financial Times by Tradeweb, the financial services group. [PRIVATE RESEARCH - NOT YET AVAILABLE ]That represents almost half of all western debt. By historical standards this is extraordinary — not least because investors continue to gobble up those notes, even though they will lose money on redemption.

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