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UK borrowing costs hit highest since 2008 as markets expect up to three interest rate rises

about 10 hours ago
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UK government borrowing costs have reached their highest level since 2008, while financial markets now expect up to three interest rate rises this year as investors digest the impact of the Iran conflict.The yield, or interest rate, on 10-year borrowing was pushed to heights not seen since the global financial crisis, as investors dumped UK government bonds.The market move followed the Bank of England’s decision on Thursday to leave interest rates on hold at 3.75% and hint at a future increase.By Friday, markets were pricing in as many as three interest rate rises in 2026.

Higher gilt yields create a headache for the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, by pushing up the cost of servicing the government’s debt pile.The 10-year yield was 5% at close of trade – the highest level since the depths of the global financial crisis in mid-2008.Meanwhile, stock markets on both sides of the Atlantic slid as investors digested a report that the US is to send more troops to the Middle East.On Friday, the Axios website reported the US was considering plans to occupy or blockade Iran’s Kharg Island in an effort to pressure Tehran to reopen the strait of Hormuz.The FTSE 100 index was down 1.

44% – erasing all its gains in 2026 and closing below the 10,000 mark – Germany’s DAX was was 1,9% lower and France’s CAC fell 1,7%,In the US, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq were down about 1% in early afternoon trading on Wall Street,The pound also fell nearly 1% against the dollar to $1.

3316.After the jump in bond yields, Kathleen Brooks, the research director of the trading platform XTB, said: “The bond vigilantes are after the UK once more.” She suggested investors would be closely monitoring any government plans to spend money on bailing out energy consumers.“The fact that UK debt is selling off more than anywhere else should be a warning sign to this government: be careful about making promises around energy subsidies, as the gilt market may not have the bandwidth for any more handouts,” Brooks added.The latest gilt sell-off followed public finances data published on Friday morning, which showed a higher-than-expected monthly deficit of £14.

3bn in February – £2.2bn up on the same month a year earlier.The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said the data had been affected by the timing of government debt repayments, with some falling into February instead of January.At the same time, the ONS revised up its estimate of January’s surplus – already a record for that month – to £31.9bn, from £30.

4bn previously, helped by an increase in tax payments bolstering government receipts.Reeves has deliberately increased borrowing for investment projects since Labour came to power in 2024 but has also raised taxes significantly, in an effort to reduce the current deficit, which measures borrowing to pay for day-to-day spending.The latest data showed progress on that measure, with the current budget deficit in the 11 months to February down by 21.1% from the same period last year, at £62.1bn.

Total borrowing for the same period, of £125.9bn, looked on course to undershoot the Office for Budget Responsibility’s estimate for the year as a whole, of £138.3bn.However, it came as analysts increasingly fretted that higher energy prices, inflation and interest rates as a result of the Middle East conflict could jeopardise the £23bn headroom the chancellor left against her fiscal rules in last autumn’s budget.Martin Beck, the chief economist at the consultancy and analysis firm WPI Strategy, said: “That the deficit numbers are broadly on track will be a welcome development for a government keen to preserve fiscal credibility at a time of unwelcome geopolitical and economic turbulence.

But that turbulence means the recent fiscal numbers may prove a poor guide to what comes next.”Nabil Taleb, an economist at the consultancy PwC, said: “Interest rate cuts are inevitably deferred, inflation now looks set to pick up again, and growth remains subdued.“That combination risks putting renewed pressure on borrowing and leaves the public finances exposed, underlining just how quickly the fiscal picture can shift.”The government has repeatedly said its tax increases and measures to control inflation, including cutting energy bills from April, have put the economy in a stronger position to withstand whatever is to come.The chief secretary to the Treasury, James Murray, said: “We have the right economic plan.

Because of the choices we made before the conflict in the Middle East began, we are better prepared for a more volatile world.”
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Jessie Diggins seals extraordinary fourth World Cup overall title before retirement on home snow

No woman from outside Europe had ever captured the cross-country skiing World Cup overall title until Jessie Diggins in 2021. Now she’s won it four times.The Minnesota-born star clinched yet another crystal globe in the twilight of her glittering career on Friday, securing the season crown with a fifth-place finish in the 10km classic at the World Cup finals in Lake Placid, New York. Diggins made it a mathematical certainty with two races remaining in the season-ending weekend, giving her a third consecutive overall title and fourth in total.Diggins entered the finals with a 342-point lead over Sweden’s Moa Ilar

about 6 hours ago
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Wheatley leaves Audi and clears path to become Aston Martin team principal

Jonathan Wheatley has left his role as Audi team principal, the Formula One team have confirmed, paving the way for his anticipated switch to the same role at Aston Martin.Wheatley’s arrival would allow the current Aston Martin principal, Adrian Newey, to return his focus to the technical and design areas in which he excels after the team endured a disastrous start to the new season.Wheatley, who previously spent almost 20 years at Red Bull, had been team principal at Audi (in its former guise as Sauber last season) for just over a year. However, with Aston Martin in dire straits, the team are believed to have acted decisively to bring Wheatley aboard to take the helm.Aston Martin have opened the season without finishing a race

about 8 hours ago
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Carabao Cup final, WSL and more Premier League drama – follow with us

Normally the Premier League weekend starts here, but David Tindall will have the reaction to Friday night’s Bournemouth v Manchester United game as well as the buildup to the day’s action. He will be looking at the fallout from Thomas Tuchel’s England squad selection, as well as looking forward to the day’s four Premier League games. It’s a full-on day in the Championship, too, with Middlesbrough’s recent stumbles opening up third-placed Ipswich’s shot at automatic promotion – except they are at home to a fourth-placed Millwall side motivated by injustice, after losing against Blackburn in a game that turned on a red card that was subsequently annulled. Send your thoughts on anything to do with the day’s games to matchday.live@theguardian

about 9 hours ago
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World’s top-rated Flat horse to race in Dubai despite conflict in the Gulf

Calandagan, the world’s top-rated Flat horse in 2025, will fly to Dubai from Paris on Saturday to run in the Sheema Classic at Meydan next weekend, despite the continuing conflict in the Gulf region.The gelding’s owner, Aga Khan Studs, consulted staff already in Dubai before deciding to give the green light to Francis-Henri Graffard’s five-year-old, the winner of four Group One events last season including the Japan Cup in November.“We’ve been very happy with Calandagan,” Nemone Routh, the owner’s racing manager, said on Friday. “If we didn’t run in Dubai then we’d have been looking at races in the summer. He’s in great form and we already have a filly out there with staff

about 10 hours ago
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Hodgkinson shrugs off kit mishap to cruise into world indoor 800m semi-finals

No opponent has come close to knocking Keely Hodgkinson off her stride in 2026. But after breezing into the semi-finals of the world indoor championships, she revealed that her preparations had been interrupted by an airline, KLM, losing her kit for 48 hours on the flight to Poland.It led to the overwhelming favourite for 800m gold having to train in whatever she could beg or borrow – and getting a blister as a result. Not that it seemed to bother her as she cruised into Saturday’s semi-finals with a dominant victory in 2min 0.32sec

about 11 hours ago
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‘They call me Grandpa Joe’: coach Schmidt in a hurry as clock ticks down on Wallabies reign

Joe Schmidt was in Melbourne’s west coaching Footscray RFC’s under-18s on Monday night, then conducting a 20-minute Q&A that ran to two hours. The next day he called together the Wallabies leaders and challenged them to set the standards at their Super Rugby clubs. By Wednesday he was deep in meetings with Queensland Reds boss Les Kiss, the coach who will take over the national side in July.Schmidt is just off another call with Kiss when he arrives to speak with Guardian Australia, biceps bulging after a workout and eyes gleaming ahead of another day spent dragging the Wallabies back to respectability and priming them for the 2027 World Cup on home soil.This relentless work ethic runs contrary to the title his grandchildren have given him

about 12 hours ago
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UK borrowing costs hit highest since 2008 as markets expect up to three interest rate rises

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‘Huge build-up of risk’: London’s centuries-old shipping industry wrestles with Iran war

about 13 hours ago
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JP Morgan Chase to use computer estimates to monitor hours worked by junior bankers

about 16 hours ago
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Marmite maker Unilever in talks to merge food business with US-based McCormick

about 16 hours ago
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Work from home and slow down on the road: world’s energy watchdog advises emergency measures as oil prices rise

about 20 hours ago
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High charges, poor service: NCP hits the skids as drivers change habits

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