UK markets

UK borrowing costs hit 18-year high amid Starmer uncertainty

Ten-year gilt yields briefly reached 5.13% as investors weighed political uncertainty, higher oil prices and the risk of looser public spending

Source language: English
0
UK borrowing costs hit 18-year high amid Starmer uncertainty
Location
United Kingdom
United Kingdom
UK government borrowing costs rose sharply Tuesday, with 10-year gilt yields briefly hitting 5.13% amid uncertainty over Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer.
Financial markets Gilts Government borrowing Keir Starmer UK economy

UK government borrowing costs rose sharply Tuesday, with 10-year gilt yields briefly hitting 5.13% amid uncertainty over Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer.

UK government borrowing costs jumped on Tuesday, with the benchmark 10-year borrowing rate briefly reaching 5.13%, near levels last seen during the 2008 global financial crisis, as uncertainty over Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer unsettled investors.

The move matters because higher gilt yields can raise the cost of government borrowing and feed through to parts of the wider economy, including fixed-rate mortgage pricing. The pressure came as markets were already wary that oil prices, pushed above $100 a barrel by the Iran war, could keep inflation elevated and prompt further interest rate increases.

The UK’s main stock index, the FTSE 100, fell 0.5%, with British bank shares among the leading decliners. Sterling also dropped 0.5% against the dollar to $1.35.

Borrowing costs have risen for governments more broadly since the oil-price shock, but the UK has seen elevated rates compared with similarly sized economies. Analysts said investors were focused on whether any change at the top of the Labour Party could bring a looser approach to public spending and government borrowing.

Prime Minister Starmer and Chancellor Rachel Reeves have repeatedly pledged to stick to “iron clad” borrowing rules in an effort to reassure markets that their economic plans are credible. Some Labour MPs on the party’s left, however, have questioned whether the UK’s budget rules are suitable for long-term renewal.

Capital Economics analysts said the UK’s “already fragile fiscal position” meant investors would be alert to signs of fiscal loosening, adding that likely alternatives to Starmer and Reeves would probably not be seen as equally disciplined on public spending.

Anna Macdonald, investment strategy director at Hargreaves Lansdown, said the bond market had been unsettled by the possibility that a different prime minister could change course on borrowing rules. She said that would lead investors, including overseas buyers who account for about 25% to 30% of UK government bond purchases, to demand a higher risk premium.

Government bonds, known in the UK as gilts, are how the state borrows from investors when spending exceeds tax revenue. The yield is the effective interest rate investors demand to lend money. On Tuesday, yields rose across two-, five-, 10- and 30-year gilts, with the 30-year rate hitting 5.80%, its highest level since 1998.

The next test for markets will be whether the government can restore confidence in its fiscal plans while investors continue to price in the combined risks of political uncertainty, higher energy costs and inflation pressure.

More from this section

Business news

More from this location

Related tags

Related articles

Shared tag: UK economy Government debt
UK 30-year borrowing costs hit highest level since 1998

Yields rose as markets absorbed the impact of the Iran war, higher energy prices and political uncertainty before Thursday’s elections

May 5, 2026 United Kingdom
Shared tag: UK economy UK cost pressures
UK prices could stay higher for eight months after Iran war, minister says

Darren Jones said ministers are planning for supply-chain disruption, though price pressure is seen as more likely than empty supermarket shelves

Apr 28, 2026 United Kingdom
Shared tag: Gilts U.K. politics
Starmer vows to fight on as Labour revolt rattles gilt market

The British prime minister promised a sharper agenda on growth, defence, Europe and energy after local election losses triggered calls from dozens of Labour MPs for him to quit

May 11, 2026 London
Shared tag: Keir Starmer Ukraine support
Starmer says UK talks on EU Ukraine loan could strengthen ties

The prime minister said Britain is discussing participation in a £78bn EU-backed loan plan, with potential benefits for Ukraine, UK jobs and defence cooperation with Brussels

May 4, 2026 Yerevan
Shared tag: Keir Starmer Labour leadership crisis
Jess Phillips among four ministers quitting as Starmer fights revolt

The resignations deepen Labour’s internal crisis after poor election results, though a formal challenge to the prime minister has not been triggered

May 12, 2026 Downing Street
Shared tag: Keir Starmer UK politics
Who could challenge Keir Starmer if Labour turns on him?

No Labour leadership contest has been triggered, but Andy Burnham, Angela Rayner and Wes Streeting are among the figures being discussed as pressure builds on the prime minister

May 12, 2026 London

Comments (0)

Please log in to comment.
No comments yet.