UK government borrowing costs seesaw as official economic forecasts released early

UK government borrowing costs seesaw as official economic forecasts released early


LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM – MARCH 26, 2025: Britain’s Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves leaves 11 Downing Street ahead of the announcement of the Spring Statement in the House of Commons in London, United Kingdom on March 26, 2025. (Photo credit should read Wiktor Szymanowicz/Future Publishing via Getty Images)

Wiktor Szymanowicz | Future Publishing | Getty Images

U.K. government borrowing costs fell on Wednesday after the country’s Office for Budget Responsibility unexpectedly released its economic and fiscal forecasts ahead of the Autumn Budget.

Yields on the benchmark 10-year gilt were last seen flat at around 4.5%. When the report was initially released yields fell as much 4 basis points, before reversing course to gain as many as 4 basis points.

Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

hide content

U.K. 10-year gilt

The OBR was scheduled to publish its forecasts following the budget, which Finance Minister Rachel Reeves began delivering in parliament at 12:30 p.m. London time (7:30 a.m. ET).

As she began speaking, Reeves labeled the early release of the OBR’s outlook “deeply disappointing and a serious error on their part.”

In a statement, the OBR said the link to its outlook went live on its website “too early this morning” and had since been removed.

“We apologise for this technical error and have initiated an investigation into how this happened,” it said, noting that the mistake would be reported to its oversight board and the relevant government bodies.

In its report, the fiscal watchdog gave details of tax-raising measures that will be announced in the budget, including freezes on income tax thresholds, taxes on private pension contributions that exceed £2,000 a year, new mileage-based taxes on electric vehicles, and an annual tax on homes valued above £2 million ($2.6 million).

The budget will see taxes on dividends, property and savings income increased by 2 percentage points, the OBR also revealed, which is expected to raise £2.1 billion.

New spending policies, including the removal of a so-called two-child limit on welfare, will increase public borrowing by £7 billion next year, the OBR forecast, and by £11 billion in 2029-30.

The OBR lowered its U.K. growth forecast by 0.3 percentage points, citing lower underlying productivity growth, saying it now expects gross domestic product to grow by an average 1.5% in the coming five years.

Why do bond yields matter?

In the run-up to the budget, investors told CNBC bond markets wanted to see Reeves cut public spending and hike taxes, moves that will be unpopular among the electorate.

Bond yields and prices move in opposite directions, so when investors are reluctant to lend to a government, the price of the bond falls and the yield rises.

The U.K. government currently has the highest borrowing costs of any G7 nation, with its 30-year gilt yield trading well above the critical 5% threshold and spending much of this year at multi-decade highs.

Dramatic rises in gilt yields — essentially the amount of interest the government pays on its debt — could also have a wider impact on the overall economy.

While bond yields reflect borrowing costs for the governments who issue them, they can also affect mortgage rates, investment returns, the wider economy and personal borrowing.

Back in 2022, Prime Minister Liz Truss’s swathe of unfunded tax cuts triggered a bond sell-off that had long-lasting effects on the economy and led to her resignation just 44 days into the job.



Source

Investors are misreading news about the Iran war, analysts say as markets whipsaw
World

Investors are misreading news about the Iran war, analysts say as markets whipsaw

An Iranian flag flutters as a woman walks past damaged buildings amid a 10-day ceasefire between Lebanon and Israel, in the southern suburbs of Beirut, Lebanon, April 20, 2026. Marko Djurica | Reuters “Complacent” investors risk getting wrong-footed as they continue to misread developments in the Iran war, analysts said after markets reacted to the […]

Read More
Eli Lilly agrees to acquire cancer drug maker Kelonia in deal worth up to  billion
World

Eli Lilly agrees to acquire cancer drug maker Kelonia in deal worth up to $7 billion

The Eli Lilly logo appears on the company’s office in San Diego, California, U.S., Nov. 21, 2025. Mike Blake | Reuters Eli Lilly will acquire biotech company Kelonia Therapeutics in a deal worth up to $7 billion, the company said Monday. Lilly will pay $3.25 billion upfront, and the remaining payments are contingent upon clinical, […]

Read More
USA Rare Earth to buy Brazil’s Serra Verde for .8 billion to build supply outside Asia
World

USA Rare Earth to buy Brazil’s Serra Verde for $2.8 billion to build supply outside Asia

USA Rare Earth has announced plans to buy Brazilian rare earths miner Serra Verde in a deal worth $2.8 billion in cash and shares, as it seeks to challenge China’s dominance of the supply chain. The Oklahoma-headquartered company said it will pay $300 million in cash and $126.9 million in its own newly issued stock […]

Read More