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UK gets record demand at government debt auction; FTSE 100 index has 10,000-point mark in sight – business live | Business

Uk attracts record orders for government sale despite Starmer coup speculation

Britain has not lost the support of the bond markets, despite the turmoil in Westminster and uncertainty over this month’s budget.

A new auction of inflation-linked UK debt, which matures in 2038, has attracted record demand from investors keen to buy the bonds.

According to Reuters, demand for the UK debt broke the previous record.

They say:

Orders for the 1.75% September 2038 inflation-linked bond topped £69bn, a bookrunner said, beating a previous record of £67.5bn for an index-linked gilt sold via syndication in March.

The bond was priced to give a yield 10.5 basis points above that of the 1.125% index-linked gilt due in 2037.

A large number of orders is usually good news for a bond issuer, who will choose the most attractively-priced offers.

Index-linked bonds protect investors from the rising cost of living, because both the coupon payments (interest on the debt) and the principal payments (the amount actually borrowed, which is repaid when the bond matures) rises or falls in line with inflation.

This strong demand is a sign that the Westminster furore over a possible leadership challenge to Keir Starmer, now denied by health secretary Wes Streeting, has not prompted bond investors to shun UK debt.

As flagged earlier, the price of UK government bonds has dropped today, pushing up the implied cost of borrowing.

But while UK gilts are lagging behind other government debt today, the moves are modest.

Could that be a sign that the bond markets are sanguine about the possibility of defenestation on Downing Street?

Kathleen Brooks, research director at XTB, says:

UK bond yields are marginally higher on the back of this political chaos, the 10-year yield is higher by 2.7bps, and the 2-year yield is higher by 1.7bps. This is a small move and does not compare with the bond market tantrum in the summer when rumours circled that Rachel Reeves would be sacked. The bond yield spike back in July helped Reeves keep her job, the question now is, will a mild reaction to the prospect of Kier Starmer being overthrown as PM embolden his potential successors?

Reeves and Starmer’s swing to the left on public spending and tax rises has been well absorbed by the bond market so far, since a tax increase could build a structural budget surplus for the UK, even if there is a hit to growth. Ironically, this could make Reeves’ and Starmer’s jobs less secure, as the political chaos threatens the UK once again.

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Key events

Shares in UK housebuilders have dropped today after Taylor Wimpey reported a pre-budget slowdown in sales (see earlier post).

Taylor Wimpey is one of the top fallers on the FTSE 250 index of medium-sized company shares, down 3.4% today. Berkeley Group are down 2%, and property portfolio Rightmove has lost 1.6%.

AJ Bell investment director Russ Mould says:

“The Budget must surely now be rivalling the Boogeyman as the thing beginning with B which engenders the most fear. Housebuilder Taylor Wimpey is the latest company to bemoan the impact the run up to this fiscal event is having on trading.

A double-digit drop in sales rates in the key autumn period is worse than that reported by rival Barratt Redrow recently, which may raise some questions among investors.

“House prices are proving reasonably resilient, supported by strong underlying supply and demand dynamics, but build costs are continuing to creep up which could put pressure on margins.

“For now, Taylor Wimpey is sticking with its full-year guidance for completions and operating profit.

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