1. Can someone explain what precisely is the Bank of England base rate. Is it the rate at which the BOE lends money overnight to banks? In which case, why would a commercial bank ever borrow from another bank (at a higher rate at the LIBOR?) or is it the interest that the BOE pays on overnight deposits by the Banks? If the latter, then it is difficult to see why the base rate would ever have much of a correlation to LIBOR.
2. If the base rate is the rate BoE lend to commercial banks that fail to keep a postive balance in the BoE ac, then why would commercial banks not borrow loads of money from BoE and lend it out in the MOney market?
3. I know that commercial banks need to keep an average reserve each month and is the average is lower or higher it needs to pay interest at base rate to BoE but if remains an average same, then the BoE pays commercial bank. So, my question is, if commercial banks can borrow money from BoE at base rate then they will never go higher or lower than the monthly average.
Thanks
2. If the base rate is the rate BoE lend to commercial banks that fail to keep a postive balance in the BoE ac, then why would commercial banks not borrow loads of money from BoE and lend it out in the MOney market?
3. I know that commercial banks need to keep an average reserve each month and is the average is lower or higher it needs to pay interest at base rate to BoE but if remains an average same, then the BoE pays commercial bank. So, my question is, if commercial banks can borrow money from BoE at base rate then they will never go higher or lower than the monthly average.
Thanks