The UK 10-year gilt at 5.095% is the number that explains Wednesday’s entire session: not far enough below Tuesday’s generational high to declare the crisis over, not far enough above it to trigger the next leg of selling. The market is in a holding pattern that tracks Keir Starmer’s political pulse minute by minute — and by mid-afternoon in London, that pulse was anything but steady.
Tuesday saw the 10-year gilt add 9 basis points to hit its highest level since 2008. Wednesday opened with a partial reversal — yields fell 2 to 6 basis points across durations in morning trade as Starmer appeared to stabilise — then gave back most of those gains after the BBC reported that Health Secretary Wes Streeting’s allies expected him to launch a formal leadership challenge as early as Thursday, according to CNBC’s Holly Ellyatt. By 12:47 p.m. London time, the benchmark 10-year gilt was trading less than 1 basis point lower at 5.095%, per CNBC reporting. Yields on 20- and 30-year gilts, per the same source, swung into positive territory as the longer end of the curve bore the brunt of the renewed uncertainty.
The Streeting Meeting That Lasted 17 Minutes
The morning had briefly offered Starmer a lifeline. King Charles III delivered the State Opening of Parliament and King’s Speech on Wednesday — a grand constitutional moment that Starmer’s team clearly hoped would shift the news cycle. Before it began, the Prime Minister held a meeting with Streeting that reportedly lasted only 17 minutes. Streeting had reportedly requested a private meeting on Tuesday and been refused. That the eventual meeting clocked in at roughly the length of a lunch queue tells you something about how much ground the two men closed.
The headline count as of Wednesday morning: 93 Labour MPs calling for Starmer to resign, 158 backing him to remain, according to Holly Ellyatt at CNBC. Those numbers technically favour Starmer. But with the BBC reporting a potential challenge as early as Thursday, the gilt market isn’t treating them as decisive.
Neil Wilson, investor strategist at Saxo UK, framed it precisely:
“The King’s Speech may see a pause in the plotting, but bond markets are clearly on edge, and I would not be surprised if Cabinet resignations begin once the King is finished, or tomorrow morning.” — CNBC
What the Bond Market Is Actually Pricing
The gilt market’s direction of travel under political stress has been consistent: investors have treated Starmer and Chancellor Rachel Reeves as the floor for fiscal discipline. Any credible threat to their tenure re-prices that floor lower. As Ellyatt reported, yields sold off in previous bouts of uncertainty over their political futures — Wednesday’s pattern simply continued that relationship in real time, with the intraday oscillations mapping almost perfectly to each news cycle update on Streeting.
Jim O’Neill, former chairman of Goldman Sachs Asset Management and former UK Treasury minister, went further on CNBC’s Squawk Box Europe. He identified four structural issues the gilt market is effectively demanding the government address: abolishing the triple lock on state pensions, reforming welfare payments, overhauling housing taxation, and arresting the compounding growth in NHS expenditure. “It’s just not sustainable,” he told CNBC. On the political theatrics surrounding the leadership question, he was equally direct: “The leadership of the country is being treated like a game show. The Tories went down this disastrous path, now Labour want to try it too.”
O’Neill’s point about the government’s social-media fixation matters for traders: a government managing by the 24-hour news cycle cannot credibly commit to the multi-year fiscal consolidation the bond market is demanding. That credibility gap is now priced into the front end.
The 2-Year Signals Something Different to the 30-Year
By 1 p.m. London time, the 2-year gilt was down 4 basis points while longer-term bonds were marginally higher, per CNBC’s European markets coverage. That divergence — front-end calming while the back end stays offered — suggests the market is not simply buying a “Starmer survives” narrative. The front end may reflect some relief that an immediate challenge hasn’t materialised; the long end tells you investors are pricing in a longer period of political instability and fiscal uncertainty, regardless of who runs the government.
For the FTSE 100, the domestic political noise matters less than it might appear. The index’s revenue base is substantially international, which has historically meant it can decouple from UK-specific sovereign stress. The more exposed index is the FTSE 250, where domestic earnings are far more sensitive to UK rate levels and consumer confidence. Neither index level is in the source material for Wednesday, so that comparison remains observational.
European equities held up better. The pan-European Stoxx 600 opened 0.4% higher on Wednesday, with most major bourses in positive territory, per CNBC — a reminder that the gilt sell-off is being read by continental markets as a UK idiosyncratic event, not a systemic European credit story.
The Jamie Dimon signal is worth tracking for a different reason. According to CNBC reporting, JPMorgan may reconsider its new London office if Starmer is ousted. Dimon’s calculus almost certainly reflects concerns about policy continuity rather than partisan preference — but for FX traders, it adds to the case that GBP/USD faces more than a short-term political volatility premium if the government changes hands.
The Realistic Counter
Starmer has, for now, more MPs publicly backing him than opposing him. The absence of a declared challenger — Streeting has not formally stepped forward as of Wednesday — means the gilt sell-off could partly reverse if Thursday passes without a leadership vote being triggered. The bond market’s direction since Tuesday’s close has already demonstrated this: yields fell sharply in early London trade precisely because Starmer appeared to stabilise. Any durable confirmation that the immediate threat has passed could pull the 10-year back toward the low 5% handle.
The structural problem O’Neill identified — Britain carrying among the highest borrowing costs of any developed nation — does not resolve on political news alone. But the short-term trade in gilts is almost entirely driven by the political binary. That makes it a market where the next cabinet resignation or Streeting press statement moves yields more than any macro print today.
The US April producer price index is due Wednesday, per the Investing.com economic calendar, with Dow Jones-polled economists expecting a headline monthly increase of 0.5%, in line with March. For sterling, a hot US PPI reading adds a dollar bid to an already-pressured pound.
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