Economy June 25, 2026 01:44 PM

UK Gilt Yields Slide to Lowest Levels Since April as Rate-Hike Odds Ease

Short-dated yields lead the move lower amid softer oil-driven inflation expectations and lingering policy uncertainty

By Ajmal Hussain
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British government bond yields fell to their lowest readings since April 17 as markets reduced expectations for near-term Bank of England rate increases. Two-year gilts led the decline, while longer-dated bonds lagged peers in the U.S. and Germany. Traders cited easing oil prices and unresolved questions about inflation and central bank policy as the forces shaping recent moves.

UK Gilt Yields Slide to Lowest Levels Since April as Rate-Hike Odds Ease
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Key Points

  • Two-year gilt yields fell 4 basis points to 4.103% at 1407 GMT, with five-year yields down nearly 2 basis points to 4.238% and 10-year yields near 4.6755%.
  • Markets have pushed out the fully priced timing for a 25 basis-point Bank of England hike to March 2027, with about an 80% chance of a move by December 2026.
  • Short-dated UK yields moved in line with U.S. and German bonds, while longer-dated gilts underperformed their international peers by 2-3 basis points.

British government bond yields moved lower on Thursday, reaching levels not seen since April 17 as market participants pared back short-term expectations for further Bank of England rate hikes.

At 1407 GMT the two-year gilt yield had fallen 4 basis points to 4.103%. The five-year yield eased by nearly 2 basis points to 4.238%, while the 10-year gilt held close to the three-month low of 4.6755% that it touched on Wednesday.

Market observers said the decline reflects a tug-of-war between two predominant influences. In the words of Des Cooney, Financial Consultant and Retirement Planning Specialist at Axis Financial Consultants:

"Today’s moves in US and UK bonds show that markets are still being pulled between two forces: easing energy-price pressure on one side, and uncertainty over inflation and central bank policy on the other. Lower oil prices have taken some of the immediate heat out of inflation expectations, which has helped gilts in particular, but investors are not yet ready to call the all-clear."

Forward-looking market pricing has shifted noticeably. Financial markets now do not fully price in a quarter-point Bank of England rate increase until March 2027, while the probability of a rate move by December 2026 stands at approximately 80%.

The pattern among short-dated gilts largely tracked moves in U.S. and German government bonds, reflecting global repricing of near-term rate expectations. By contrast, longer-dated gilts underperformed, lagging international counterparts by about 2 to 3 basis points.


Taken together, the data and market signals point to a near-term easing of pressure on inflation expectations driven in part by lower energy costs, yet they also highlight persistent uncertainty over how inflation and central bank policy will evolve.

Investors and portfolio managers therefore remain attentive to economic indicators and central bank communication that could prompt a re-acceleration in yields or alter the timeline for policy tightening.

Risks

  • Uncertainty over inflation and central bank policy could reverse recent declines in gilt yields, affecting fixed-income markets and interest-rate-sensitive sectors.
  • A resurgence in energy prices would put upward pressure on inflation expectations and could lead to higher yields, impacting borrowing costs across the economy.

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