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UK 10-year borrowing costs climbed further on Thursday as a bond market sell-off deepened, hitting the pound and threatening to derail the Labour government’s fiscal plans.
The 10-year gilt yield rose as much as 0.12 percentage points to 4.93 per cent in early trading, the highest level since 2008, before easing back to 4.84 per cent.
The pound was again swept up in the sell-off, dropping 0.6 per cent against the dollar to $1.229, its weakest since November 2023.
UK borrowing costs have risen sharply as investors worry about the government’s heavy borrowing needs and the growing threat of stagflation, which combines lacklustre growth with persistent price pressures.
“The economy is entering stagflation,” said Mark Dowding, chief investment officer at RBC BlueBay Asset Management.
Sterling has also been hurt by a resurgent dollar as a string of recent US data has bolstered investor confidence in the world’s largest economy.
“The sell-off in [the pound] and gilts reflect a deterioration in the UK’s fiscal prospects,” said analysts at Brown Brothers Harriman.
The dollar index, which measures the currency against a basket of six others, was up 0.1 per cent on Thursday.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves left herself a slender £9.9bn of headroom against her revised fiscal rules in the Budget even after announcing a £40bn tax-raising package that aimed to “wipe the slate clean” on public finances.
Increases in government debt yields have since put that budgetary wriggle room under threat. The level of bond yields is an important determinant of the budget headroom given its implications for the government’s interest bill, which exceeds £100bn a year.
The gilts market could suffer another bout of selling on Friday, analysts said, if closely watched jobs data in the US was to push yields higher on US Treasuries, dragging gilts with them.
“It can turn extremely grim for gilts if we see a strong payroll,” said Pooja Kumra, a UK rates strategist at TD Securities.
Analysts have said the simultaneous sell-off of gilts and the pound carried echoes of the reaction triggered by the “mini” Budget of Liz Truss in 2022.
But many investors think the situation is someway short of the gilts crisis three years ago.
“I do anticipate things to start bottoming out . . . On gilts the washout already happened last year,” said Geoffrey Yu, a senior strategist at BNY. “I’m not denying there are issues in the UK, but to suddenly draw comparisons to 2022, I think that is pushing things.”
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