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UK government bond yields highest in 16 years
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Higher yields add to worries over UK government finances
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Finance ministry says it has 'iron grip' on public purse
(Updates throughout with midmorning price action, comments)
By Amanda Cooper and Harry Robertson
LONDON, Jan 9 (Reuters) - The pound fell to its lowest
since late 2023 on Thursday, under pressure from a selloff in
global bonds that has driven the UK government's borrowing costs
to their highest in over 16 years, which has reignited concern
about Britain's finances.
Sterling was last down 0.6% at $1.2295, having
touched its lowest since November 2023 earlier in the day, while
the cost of hedging against bigger price swings over the coming
month jumped to its highest since the March 2023 banking crisis
.
Global bond yields have soared this week on the back of
concern about rising inflation, reduced chances of a drop in
interest rates, uncertainty over how U.S. President-elect Donald
Trump will conduct foreign or economic policy and the prospect
of trillions of dollars in extra debt.
The UK market has been hit particularly hard. Benchmark
10-year gilt yields have spiked by a quarter point
this week alone to their highest since 2008, as confidence in
Britain's fiscal outlook deteriorates.
Finance minister Rachel Reeves is facing her first major
test, as turmoil in the bond market could force her to cut
future spending.
Ordinarily, higher gilt yields would support the pound, but
right now, that relationship has broken down, reflecting
investors' worry about the country's finances.
"This is the bond market starting to discipline the UK
government. And at the moment they want to fight the market, and
that never ends well," Lloyd Harris, head of fixed income at
Premier Miton Investors, said.
In a statement late on Wednesday, the UK finance ministry
said it would maintain "an iron grip" on the public finances.
Sterling has been one of the best-performing currencies
against the dollar in the last couple of years, largely because
of the Bank of England's policy of keeping UK interest rates
higher for longer than other major central banks, which creates
an incentive for foreign investors to earn interest from UK
assets.
Trump's proposed policies on trade tariffs and immigration
carry the risk of fuelling U.S. price pressures, thereby
limiting the Federal Reserve's ability to cut rates, which has
sent the dollar soaring against virtually every other currency.
The derivatives market shows traders believe the Fed will
deliver one rate cut this year, but are not fully pricing in the
chance of a second. The UK market, meanwhile, shows almost
identical expectations for the BoE.
Britain is struggling with slower growth, persistent
inflation and a deteriorating labour market, lagging behind the
United States, which shows resilience in virtually every area.
"We had this story of the UK being better than Europe, the
currency is doing better, interest rates are higher,
everything's fine (for sterling)," Societe Generale chief FX
strategist Kit Juckes said.
"The danger now is people start to get a general sense of
why not use sterling for the short side of our long dollar
trade," he said.
Britain's economy is flat-lining, while the labour market is
deteriorating rapidly, as employers grapple with tax rises in
the Reeves' October budget, which contained the biggest overall
tax increases since 1993.
The yield on 30-year gilts has hit its highest
since 1998, echoing the rise in global long-dated yields.
The last time UK debt was in the eye of the storm was
September 2022, when then-Prime Minister Liz Truss unveiled
budget plans that contained billions in unfunded tax cuts that
sent gilts into freefall, battered the pound and forced the BoE
to step in to stabilise the market.
This week's move is nowhere near that of late 2022, when
10-year gilts rose a full percentage point in a week and the
pound hit record lows against the dollar.
Indeed, PIMCO, one of the world's largest bond investors,
told Reuters late on Wednesday it was still positive about UK
debt and said much of the rise in gilt yields was a function of
the increase in U.S. Treasury yields, rather than a reflection
of deeper problems at home.
(Additional reporting by Naomi Rovnick. Editing by Bernadette
Baum and Mark Potter)