On Friday, U.K. bond yields continued to rise because fixed-income buyers are upset about more bonds being issued.
The 10-year gilt yield BX:TMBMKGB-10Y went up by 9 basis points to 4.52% on Friday. At the start of her budget speech on Wednesday, Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves said that the return was 4.25%. Prices go up and down, but yields go down.
There were changes of about the same size at the short BX:TMBMKGB-02Y and long BX:TMBMKGB-30Y ends of the yield curve.
The pound GBPUSD was moving just above $1.29, having been above $1.30 at the start of budget day.
According to the financial services company Ebury, the government will borrow about £30 billion more each year, pay about £40 billion more in taxes each year, and spend about £70 billion more each year.
Bruna Skarica, top U.K. economist at Morgan Stanley, said that investors are just shocked.
As we can see now, the government did try to warn the market through the media: taxes would go up by £40 billion in FY2029/30 and capital expenditures would go up by £20 billion a year. The problem was that these numbers were so big and suggested such a big rise in borrowing that everyone in the market, including us, wouldn’t take them at face value, she said.
The independent Office for Budget Responsibility has made its opinion clear, she said: “It brings large-scale increases in borrowing into a (very) tight economy, crowding out the private sector, increasing inflation, with tax hikes weighing on the supply side of the economy.”
Francesco Pesole, an expert at ING, said that the changes are not due to panic but rather to higher inflation and expectations of higher Bank of England rates, as well as a natural response to more borrowing.
“This mechanical adjustment might take longer to happen while investors finish figuring out how well the gilt market can handle the extra supply and how much tax hikes will be able to cover the extra spending.” “However, the way the market is set up suggests that yields will rise gradually instead of suddenly,” he said.
There are still high hopes. Those rates will go down next week thanks to the Bank of England. LSEG said that there was an 82% chance that the rate would be cut by a quarter point.