Pound falls further as borrowing costs rise again

Pound falls further as borrowing costs rise again


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The pound has dropped to its lowest value against the dollar since November 2023 while government borrowing costs have continued to rise.

The pound fell to $1.21 on Monday morning as the recent sell-off continued.

Meanwhile, the rate at which the government can borrow money – known as the yield – rose again, hitting its highest level since 2008 by one measure.

Borrowing costs for many countries are rising across the world, though some have said decisions made in the Budget have made the UK particularly vulnerable.

Governments generally borrow money by selling bonds to big investors, such as pension funds. UK government bonds are known as gilts.

The yield on the 10-year gilt – the interest rate at which the government pays back a decade-long loan to investors – has risen to 4.86%, its highest level for 17 years.

The 30-year gilt rose to 5.42%, its highest level in 27 years.

Line chart showing 10-year UK Government bond yields, from 2004 to January 2025. The yield was 4.9% on 2 January 2004, and rose to a peak of 5.5% in July 2007. It then gradually fell to a low of 0.1% in August 2020, before starting to climb again. On 13 January 2025, it hit 4.9%, the highest since 2008.

Government debt costs in Germany, France, Spain and Italy have also all risen as markets opened on Monday morning.

Some experts say investors are reacting to the re-election of former US President Donald Trump and his talk of tariffs.

There is concern this will lead to inflation being more persistent than previously thought, and therefore interest rates will not come down as quickly as expected, both in the US and elsewhere.

Strong US jobs data released on Friday also added to expectations that US rates will stay higher for longer, and this has helped to strengthen the value of the dollar against other currencies.

However, Emma Wall, head of platform investors at Hargreaves Lansdown, said the UK’s problems were not purely caused by global issues, arguing that measures announced in the Budget have stoked inflation.

“If you can get inflation under control, you will see interest rates come down in the UK,” she added.

Confidence ‘bruised’

The government has made growing the UK’s economy a key objective, but recent figures indicate the economy saw zero growth between July and September, while it contracted during October.

Businesses have warned that Budget measures, such as the rise in employer National Insurance contributions, together with the higher National Living Wage could lead to job cuts and price rises.

Rupert Soames, chair of the Confederation of British Business (CBI), said the picture was “not good” but insisted that firms and investors were still somewhat upbeat.

“I wouldn’t say confidence is gone,” he told the BBC’s Today programme. “I’d say it’s bruised.”

However, he said the government was making the situation worse by introducing the Employment Rights Bill, which he said contained “powerful dissuaders to employment”.

Unions argue the protections introduced in the bill, such as banning fire and rehire, make employees safer, while the government has said it “represents the biggest upgrade in employment rights for a generation”.

However, Mr Soames said the Bill would lead to job losses. “Businesses will not only not employ, they will let people go,” he said.

As part of its push for growth, the government revealed plans on Monday to make the UK the global capital of artificial intelligence through measures such as building a new supercomputer.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said the technology has “vast potential” for rejuvenating UK public services, but the Conservatives called the plans “uninspiring” and criticised Labour’s “economic mismanagement”.



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