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UK Bonds’ Best Run in Two Years Is Winning Over Global Investors


<p>UK yields are still the highest among Group-of-Seven nations, but the gap is narrowing thanks to a surge in market bets on interest-rate cuts.</p>

UK yields are still the highest among Group-of-Seven nations, but the gap is narrowing thanks to a surge in market bets on interest-rate cuts.

October was an unusually good month for the UK bond market.

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Gilts posted their best performance in almost two years, and investors including Aberdeen Group Plc, Fidelity International and JPMorgan Asset Management are betting on more gains. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. analysts have slashed their yield forecasts, citing easing inflation pressures and signs Chancellor Rachel Reeves will announce tough steps needed to get the budget in order.

Expectations for more Bank of England interest-rate cuts are powering the move. If a small — but growing — band of strategists are correct that officials will deliver a surprise cut at a meeting this week, the remarkable rebound that’s put UK bonds at the front of a global rally will likely pick up pace.

“It’s always been a question of when inflation is going to start coming down and there are now signs that’s starting to happen,” said Seamus Mac Gorain, global head of rates at JPMorgan Asset Management, who said he is overweight gilts. “It’s pretty likely that the package that the chancellor announces is helpful to the gilt market.”

Ever since Liz Truss’s unfunded budget plans unleashed an historic selloff that led to her ouster three years ago, the nation’s turbulent debt markets have loomed large. They’ll remain a political football ahead of Reeves’ budget on Nov. 26, when she’s expected to announce tax rises in order to keep on the right side of her fiscal rules.

UK yields are still the highest among Group-of-Seven nations, but the gap is narrowing thanks to a surge in market bets on interest-rate cuts.

While the BOE cites stubborn price pressures as the reason it hasn’t cut as much as the European Central Bank, the latest data challenge that narrative.

CPI Surprise

UK inflation unexpectedly held steady rather than quickening in September and separate figures last week showed food prices fell the most since late 2020. Meanwhile, Governor Andrew Bailey — a key swing voter on the nine-member Monetary Policy Committee — has raised concerns about the UK economy running “under potential” and a softening jobs market.

Money markets are now pricing 60 basis points of rate reductions over the next year, compared with around 40 basis points at the start of October.

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