bonds

UK Bonds Selloff Follows Iran Strike

FC
Fazen Capital Research·
7 min read
1,638 words
Key Takeaway

UK 10y gilt yields jumped ~35bps to 4.35% on Mar 24, 2026; gilt-Treasury spread widened to ~45bps, pressuring auctions and LDI positions (Bloomberg, BoE, ONS).

Lead paragraph

UK government bonds experienced a pronounced repricing on Mar 24, 2026 after military strikes linked to Iran triggered a flight from long-duration sovereign risk and a concurrent rally in energy and safe-haven FX. On that day UK 10-year gilt yields rose roughly 35 basis points to around 4.35% while the two-year rose about 50 basis points to circa 5.10% (Bloomberg, Mar 24, 2026). The move represented one of the largest single-session swings in gilts since 2022 and pushed the gilt curve to a materially steeper shape versus US Treasuries. Markets signaled a sharp increase in term premia, reflecting both an immediate risk-off repricing and a re-evaluation of the UK fiscal risk premium given existing debt levels and the Bank of England's (BoE) policy stance. This piece dissects the drivers of the selloff, quantifies the transmission channels, and discusses implications for issuance, monetary policy sensitivity, and cross-asset risk pricing.

Context

The immediate catalyst for the selloff was news of an Iranian strike on Mar 24, 2026 that elevated geopolitical risk in the Middle East and prompted a rapid re-assessment of global risk appetite. Geopolitical shocks are a recurrent short-term driver of sovereign spreads and safe-haven flows; however, the scale of the gilt move reflected pre-existing structural sensitivities in the UK market. The UK enters the episode with net debt at elevated levels—public sector net debt stood near 97% of GDP in 2025 according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS)—which increases the sovereign's exposure to a volatility-induced risk premia. Concurrently, the BoE's policy rate at 5.25% (Bank of England, Mar 2026) leaves less scope for immediate reductions to backstop market stress, meaning gilts can be more reactive to risk shocks than in earlier cycles when central banks had more easing capacity.

The gilt market's structural composition matters: the proportion of outstanding gilts held by overseas investors has been sizable in recent years (Bank of England statistical releases indicate non-UK holders account for roughly 35-40% of nominal conventional gilts in recent annual snapshots). That foreign ownership increases sensitivity to global risk shifts and USD funding conditions. Additionally, UK pension funds and liability-driven investment (LDI) portfolios amplify moves when there are disorderly price changes, as margin calls force rapid sales of long-duration assets. On Mar 24 the interplay of foreign rebalancing and LDI stress dynamics accelerated price discovery, turning a geopolitical shock into a liquidity-driven repricing.

Finally, the macro backdrop exacerbated the move. Headline inflation in the UK has moderated from 2022 peaks but core goods and services inflation remained sticky in early 2026, creating expectations that rates would stay higher for longer. When a shock increases the probability of a growth slowdown, investors reassess the terminal rate versus term premia; in the UK episode, term premia rose enough to dominate any safe-haven-driven flattening that might have otherwise supported gilts.

Data Deep Dive

The most visible data point was the jump in the 10-year gilt yield: Bloomberg reported an increase of approximately 35bps to 4.35% on Mar 24, 2026. By contrast, the US 10-year Treasury yield moved from about 3.90% to 4.00% over the same period, widening the UK-US 10-year spread to roughly 35–45 basis points, its widest dispersion in several months (Bloomberg, Mar 24, 2026). The disproportionate move in gilts versus Treasuries highlights that this was not merely a USD-driven move; it reflected UK-specific risk pricing.

Short-end gilts registered an even larger absolute change: two-year yields rose roughly 50bps to about 5.10% on the day (Bloomberg). The short-end sensitivity suggests markets were rapidly re-pricing expectations about the BoE's policy path and sovereign risk premia. UK real yields and inflation-linked instruments also repriced: 10-year real yields rose around 20–25bps while the breakeven inflation rate compressed by several basis points, indicating a mix of higher real-rate premia and slightly lower near-term inflation expectations (Bank of England and Bloomberg market data, Mar 2026).

Liquidity indicators during the move showed typical stress characteristics. Bid-offer spreads across benchmark gilts widened materially—anecdotal market color and market microstructure data indicated spreads were several times wider than intra-day averages—and volumes in on-the-run gilts spiked as dealers rebalanced inventories. Primary market consequences were immediately visible: the UK Debt Management Office (DMO) faced an elevated cost-of-carry question for upcoming auctions, with market coverage ratios for nominal auctions falling below recent averages in the 24–48 hours following the move (DMO auction notices, March 2026).

Sector Implications

The selloff had differentiated consequences across fixed-income sectors. Index-linked gilts underperformed nominals on a real-yield repricing; sterling corporate credit spreads widened, with sterling investment-grade spreads widening by approximately 10–20bps and high-yield by a larger margin on Mar 24 (Bloomberg credit monitors). Banks and insurers—which run large duration mismatches on balance sheets—saw equity volatility spike and CDS spreads tick up modestly, reflecting market concerns about funding and mark-to-market impacts. The corporate issuance pipeline temporarily slowed as primary market conditions tightened: several planned sterling bond syndications were postponed, while high-quality borrowers sought dollar or euro issuance to diversify demand.

Pension schemes and LDI portfolios were immediate collateral users. Margin volatility forced some UK pension schemes to re-lever cash holdings to meet collateral calls, increasing selling pressure on long-dated gilts. This mechanism has appeared in prior UK stress episodes and remains a persistent source of liquidity amplification. International investors rebalanced away from gilts toward safer or more liquid alternatives, notably US Treasuries and selected emerging-market sovereigns with stronger fiscal headrooms.

For currency markets, sterling initially depreciated against the dollar by roughly 1.0–1.5% intraday as the repricing unfolded; swaps and cross-currency basis moves reflected a brief spike in sterling funding stress. Commodity markets reacted differently: Brent crude futures rallied about 4–6% in the days after the strike, reflecting higher risk of supply disruption (ICE Brent, Mar 25–27, 2026), which partially offset gilt demand as higher energy prices imply greater inflation persistence.

Risk Assessment

From a risk-management perspective, the episode underscores several persistent vulnerabilities in UK fixed income: concentration in foreign holders, large duration in pension-sector liabilities, and elevated public debt-to-GDP limiting immediate fiscal backstops. Public finances are more sensitive to a sustained move higher in yields—each 100bps rise in the 10-year yields increases annual interest servicing costs by an estimated £20–30 billion over a multi-year horizon, depending on issuance maturity and gilt rollover profiles (ONS and HMT debt sensitivity estimates, 2025). That sensitivity places a premium on maintaining robust auction functioning and transparent fiscal communications.

Monetary policy constraints amplify sovereign sensitivity. With the BoE policy rate at 5.25% and core inflation sticky, markets had limited confidence that rates would be cut quickly to offset growth shocks, which left term premia free to rise. If geopolitical risk remains elevated and drives persistent risk-off sentiment, there is a non-trivial scenario in which long-term yields remain higher even as short-term growth softens, producing further curve steepening and balance-sheet stress for duration-heavy institutions.

Liquidity risk remains elevated in on-the-run gilts during stress windows. Dealer balance sheets are more limited than in earlier decades due to post-crisis regulation, meaning market depth is more fragile. Any repeat of LDI-driven margin dynamics would likely produce similar temporary disorderly trades, suggesting the need for pre-emptive contingency planning by large institutional holders and careful monitoring by market infrastructure bodies.

Fazen Capital Perspective

Fazen Capital views the Mar 24, 2026 episode as a structural amplification of a recurrent shock rather than evidence of an emergent solvency crisis. The market move was driven by term-premia repricing and liquidity dynamics, not by an immediate macrofiscal insolvency signal. That distinction matters: a term-premia story implies reversibility over weeks to months if volatility abates and central bank communications stabilize expectations. Conversely, a solvency narrative would require materially higher long-term yields to compensate for longer-term fiscal deterioration.

We offer a contrarian insight: heightened volatility episodes can create technical dislocations that overstate long-run risk premia. Historical comparisons (e.g., gilt episodes in 2016 and 2022) show that parts of the move were subsequently reversed as liquidity returned and targeted interventions (including central bank or DMO operations) restored orderly functioning. For institutional investors, distinguishing transitory liquidity-driven premia from persistent fundamental repricing is critical. For policymakers, the priority is ensuring predictable auction mechanics and clear communication around contingent fiscal and monetary responses to reduce avoidable risk premia. For further reading on structural gilt market issues, see our pieces on market microstructure and sovereign issuance on the [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) hub.

FAQs

Q: How do UK gilt moves compare historically when geopolitical shocks occur?

A: Historically, UK gilts have shown larger relative moves than US Treasuries in episodes where the shock intersects with domestic fiscal or liquidity vulnerabilities. Notable precedents include episodes in 2016 and the 2022 gilt flash selloff where domestic pension LDI dynamics amplified moves. The Mar 24, 2026 episode fits that pattern: gilts moved ~35bps on the 10-year, while US 10-years moved ~10bps, widening the spread by roughly 25bps intraday (Bloomberg).

Q: What practical implications does this have for the DMO and BoE actions?

A: Practically, the DMO may need to adjust auction size/timing or provide enhanced transparency to shore up demand in the short term, while the BoE's lender-of-last-resort function and market operations (e.g., temporary repo facilities) can alleviate dealer balance sheet strain. Both institutions historically deploy calibrated interventions to restore market functioning rather than to dictate yield levels; the credibility and speed of those responses materially influence the duration of dislocations. For discussion on microstructure remedies and policy tools, see our analysis on the [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).

Bottom Line

The Mar 24, 2026 gilt selloff reflected a convergence of geopolitical shock, elevated public indebtedness, and fragile market microstructure—producing a spike in term premia rather than a definitive solvency signal. While technical forces likely amplified near-term moves, the episode highlights the need for robust auction mechanics, transparent policy communication, and contingency planning among major institutional holders.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

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