Daily Mail

Gilt yields fall as investors bet on rate cuts

- By Hugo Duncan

BORROWING costs fell as investors ramped up bets on interest rate cuts next year despite efforts by the Bank of England to quash such talk.

the yield on ten-year gilts – a benchmark measure of how much the Government pays to borrow – dropped below 4pc for the first time since May.

the slide came as financial markets indicated a just over 50pc chance that the first rate cut will come in May. if this does not materialis­e, investors are all but certain it will come in June in a major boost for borrowers with mortgages and other loans.

However, Bank governor andrew Bailey once again sought to dampen expectatio­ns of such a move, insisting that rates would need to remain at 5.25pc ‘for an extended period’ to tame inflation. He said: ‘rates are likely to need to remain at these levels for an extended period to bring inflation back to target on a sustained basis.’

But with the Us Federal reserve and the European Central Bank also expected to cut rates next year, investors increasing­ly believe the Bank of England will follow suit.

in another sign of the impact higher rates are having on the economy, latest figures show Britain’s constructi­on industry has suffered a third month of decline as a sharp slump in housebuild­ing takes its toll.

s&P Global said its index of activity across the industry dipped from 45.6 in October to 45.5 in november.

it was the second weakest reading since the depths of Covid lockdowns in May 2020 and the third month in a row below the 50 cut-off between growth and decline. Housebuild­ing was the worst-performing sector according to the figures, as recent rises in interest rates pushed up the cost of mortgages – hitting demand for new homes. Civil engineerin­g and commercial property fared slightly better.

On a brighter note, lower prices for steel and timber and generally weaker demand pushed down raw material costs at the fastest rate since July 2009.

the slump in constructi­on contrasts with a more positive, though still sluggish, picture in the wider economy, with the private sector growing again after three months of decline led by a rebound in the services sector.

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