Newspaper front pages reporting on the sterling crisis - HARRIS/PA Archive/PA Images

I am not generally a fan of ‘anniversary journalism’ but I do think it is worth marking the twenty-fifth anniversary of ‘Black Wednesday’ – the day that sterling fell out of the EU’s ill-fated Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM).
Wednesday 16th September 1992 was one of the most tumultuous days in the UK’s peacetime history. A quarter of a century on, the political and financial impact of ‘Black Wednesday’ continues to resonate.
“Today has been an extremely difficult and turbulent day,” said Chancellor Norman Lamont, on the doorstep of HM Treasury, as a mass of television camera top-lights glared upon him. “Massive speculative flows have continued to disrupt the exchange rate mechanism”.
Lamont wasn’t wrong. Britain lost practically all its foreign exchange reserves on Black Wednesday. The Bank of England failed in its bid to counter speculative pressure, as traders forced the pound down and outside specified ERM limits against the German D-Mark.
During the five previous days there had already been financial turmoil, as the markets put the pressure on sterling. Given that the UK was in recession that seemed logical. The Government tried to scare the markets off with massive currency interventions, buying up huge amounts of sterling. But as all traders know, backing a currency depreciation that looks inevitable is a one-way bet, with huge profits to be made if it comes true but tiny losses if not.
At 11am on 16 September, as sterling was being mercilessly dumped, the Bank of England raised interest rates from 10% to 12% – levels unthinkable to many today – in a bid to support the pound. The market did not blink and the rout continued. So a rise to 15% was announced – potentially ruinous for millions of corporate lenders and mortgage-holders. But still, sterling continued to dive.
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