London, 10 January 2025 — The yield on the benchmark 10-year UK government bond, the gilt, surged to 4.85% on Thursday, its highest level since August 1998, as deepening political turmoil and a loss of fiscal credibility sent shockwaves through financial markets. The sharp rise in borrowing costs reflects mounting investor anxiety over the UK’s governance crisis, compounded by global headwinds and a fractured domestic policy landscape.
The immediate trigger was the resignation of the Chancellor of the Exchequer late Wednesday following a leaked Treasury document revealing that the government’s fiscal forecasts had been deliberately manipulated to conceal a widening deficit. The scandal, which has drawn comparisons to the 1976 IMF bailout crisis, has shattered what remained of the government’s reputation for sound economic management. Prime Minister’s refusal to call a general election has only deepened the sense of institutional paralysis.
Market reaction was swift and brutal. The FTSE 250 index of mid-cap stocks tumbled 3.2%, while the pound sterling fell 1.8% against the US dollar, breaching the $1.20 mark for the first time since November 2022. Credit default swaps on UK sovereign debt jumped to their highest level since the aftermath of the 2016 Brexit referendum, indicating that investors now view British government bonds as riskier than those of Italy.
The gilt sell-off is part of a broader global repricing of risk, driven by persistent inflation and hawkish central banks. The US Federal Reserve’s increasingly reluctant stance on rate cuts has lifted Treasury yields worldwide, but the UK’s premium over Germany has widened to over 200 basis points, the largest spread since the eurozone debt crisis. This “UK risk premium” is now a focal point for currency and bond traders, who see little improvement in the near term.
Geopolitical factors have exacerbated the situation. Uncertainty surrounding the upcoming US presidential election, continued instability in the Middle East, and the European Union’s insistence on tighter post-Brexit financial regulation have all weighed on sentiment. Yet the core of the crisis is homegrown. The Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) has warned that the government’s debt trajectory is unsustainable without immediate corrective action, but the minority administration lacks the political capital to implement necessary spending cuts or tax rises.
For investors, the implications are stark. Higher gilt yields will feed through to increased mortgage rates and corporate borrowing costs, threatening to tip the economy into recession. The Bank of England faces a difficult dilemma: raising interest rates to defend the pound and curb inflation would further depress growth, while cutting rates could trigger a full-blown sterling crisis. Market expectations for a rate cut in June have been halved to just 10 basis points.
The crisis has also revived memories of the 1998 Asian financial crisis, when UK gilts last traded at these levels. At that time, Chancellor Gordon Brown’s early independence for the Bank of England helped restore confidence. Today, no such silver bullet appears available. Unless political stability is restored and a credible fiscal plan is presented, gilt yields may well test the psychologically significant 5% level, a threshold that would have profound consequences for the UK’s fiscal position and its standing in global capital markets.
As the sun set over Westminster, the mood among bond traders was one of grim resignation. The UK, once a beacon of stability in a turbulent world, is now seen as a source of systemic risk. Restoring trust will require more than a change of chancellor; it demands a fundamental reckoning with the country’s governance and economic strategy.








