LONDON, April 8, 2025 – The yield on the 10-year UK government bond breached the 5.4% mark today, reaching levels not seen since the autumn of 1998. The surge, which has accelerated over the past three trading sessions, reflects a deepening crisis of confidence in the fiscal credibility of the United Kingdom. Analysts and money managers alike point to a confluence of domestic governance failures and global inflationary pressures that are driving investors away from British sovereign debt.
“This is not merely a technical adjustment or a temporary spike,” said Dr. Eleanor Hartley, Professor of Financial Economics at the London School of Economics. “We are witnessing a structural repricing of UK risk. The market is effectively voting no confidence in the government’s ability to manage its finances.”
The move in gilt yields has been sharp. From 4.8% two weeks ago, yields have surged by over 60 basis points. The pound sterling has also come under pressure, falling 1.2% against the dollar to $1.2305, its lowest level this year. The FTSE 100 fell 1.8% in early trading, led by domestically oriented stocks such as housebuilders and banks.
The immediate trigger appears to be a leaked internal Treasury document suggesting that public sector borrowing is set to exceed official forecasts by at least £15 billion in the current fiscal year. Combined with stubbornly high core inflation, which remains above 4%, the bond market has reacted aggressively. “The market is pricing in a higher term premium – the extra compensation investors demand for bearing the risk of holding long-dated UK debt,” explained James Carrick, Global Head of Sovereign Ratings at Rothschild & Co.
But the root cause runs deeper. The UK has experienced a revolving door of chancellors and prime ministers over the past five years, with six different occupants of 11 Downing Street. This has led to a perception of chronic policy instability. Investors cite the 2022 mini-budget crisis as a trauma that has not been forgotten. “The memory of the LDI crisis lingers. Any hint of fiscal slippage triggers an outsized reaction,” said Sarah Houghton, a portfolio manager at Legal & General Investment Management.
The Bank of England, which had been cautiously signalling a potential rate cut in May, may now have to reconsider. “The bank is caught between a rock and a hard place,” said Hartley. “Raising rates to defend the currency and contain bond yields would damage the economy, but allowing inflation to persist would further erode the value of gilts. There is no easy path forward.”
There are also global headwinds. US Treasury yields have risen to 4.8% on expectations of a more aggressive Federal Reserve, and German Bund yields have climbed to 3.1% on the back of a more disciplined European Central Bank. UK yields, however, have risen more than those of any other major advanced economy, suggesting a country-specific premium.
“What we are seeing is a wake-up call for policymakers,” added Carrick. “The UK needs a credible medium-term fiscal plan that is independently assessed. Without it, the risk premium will continue to widen. We may be looking at a 5.5% yield as the new baseline if confidence is not restored.”
Downing Street has so far remained silent, but sources indicate that an emergency meeting of the Treasury and the Bank of England is scheduled for this afternoon. The government is under pressure to announce spending cuts or tax increases to reassure markets. However, with a general election expected within a year, such measures are politically fraught.
The outlook remains precarious. If yields continue to climb, mortgage rates will rise sharply, worsening the cost of living crisis. The Bank of England’s quantitative tightening programme, which involves selling gilts back into the market, adds further selling pressure. “We are in a vicious circle,” concluded Houghton. “Higher yields mean higher borrowing costs for the government, which further widens the deficit. Breaking that cycle requires decisive action. The question is whether the current government is capable of delivering it.”








