Consols (originally short for consolidated annuities, but subsequently taken to mean consolidated stock) were government bond debt issues in the form of , redeemable at the option of the government. The first British consols were issued by the Bank of England in 1751. They have now been fully redeemed. In 1752, the Chancellor of the Exchequer and Prime Minister Sir Henry Pelham converted all outstanding issues of redeemable government stock into one bond, Consolidated 3.5% Annuities, in order to reduce the coupon (interest rate) paid on the government debt.
The United States government issued consols from 1877 to 1930, which have likewise been redeemed.
In 1757, the annual interest rate on the stock was reduced to 3%, leaving the stock as consolidated 3% annuities. The coupon rate remained at 3% until 1888. In 1888, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, George Joachim Goschen, converted the consolidated 3% annuities, along with reduced 3% annuities (issued in 1752) and new 3% annuities (1855), into a new bond, 2% consolidated stock, under the National Debt (Conversion) Act 1888 (Goschen's Conversion). Under the Act, the interest rate of the stock was reduced to 2% in 1903, and the stock given a first redemption date of 5 April 1923, after which point the stock could be redeemed at par value by Act of Parliament.
In 1927, Chancellor Winston Churchill issued a new government stock, 4% consols, as a partial refinancing of the National War Bonds issued in 1917 during World War I.
! Year/Date !! Description |
Consols first issued |
Consolidated 3.5% annuities |
Reduced 3% annuities |
Consolidated 3% annuities |
New 3% annuities |
National Debt (Conversion) Act 1888 (Goschen's Conversion) |
2% consolidated stock |
2% consolidated stock |
first redemption date |
2% consolidated stock |
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