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UK 10-year gilt rates fall to a three-month low due to oil price drop

British 10-year bond rates fell to a 3-month low on Wednesday, as part of an international government bond rally. Oil prices had fallen to their lowest levels since before the start of the Iran war.

According to LSEG, the 10-year gilt 'yield', which moves inversely with price, reached its lowest level since March 18 when it hit 4.676%. This was at 1408 GMT. It surpassed a previous record low of 4.679%, set on April 8

The yield on 10-year U.S. Treasuries was 4.69% late on Wednesday. This is in line with what happened in the market.

The yields on longer-dated bonds have reached their lowest levels since April.

Brent crude oil fell by 4%, the lowest price since the beginning of the conflict in February. As more oil tankers started to leave the Strait of Hormuz, the losses increased.

The PS2.9 trillion ($3.8 billion) market for government bonds in Britain has not shown any signs of concern about reports that Andy Burnham could replace Finance Minister Rachel Reeves, who is almost certain to be the next Prime Minister.

Investors await details of Burnham's plans for borrowing, taxation and spending.

"Our concern remains that there are no additional funds to increase public expenditure. Mohit Kumar is the chief European economist of Jefferies. He said that tax increases are unlikely to be effective and that efficiency savings will never work.

Kumar said Jefferies expects the yield curve for gilts to steepen and that they will "stay away" (from long-dated gilts).

Investors now expect a Bank of England rate increase of between 1 and 2 bps by year's end, down from one to two last week, as lower oil costs are expected to curb inflation pressure.

The 'Debt Management Office' reported that the auction of benchmark 5-year gilts, worth PS4,25 billion, was conducted without incident Wednesday. Investors bid 3.47 times the amount offered.

The 5-year yield in the cash market fell to a 2-month low of 4,242%, and was down last 6 bps for the day.

(source: Reuters)