Investors bail on UK Inc amid Starmer leadership crisis, deficit alarms

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Malay Mail

LONDON, May 15 — British government bonds, stocks and ​sterling fell on Friday, as domestic political uncertainty clashed with global worries about an inflationary shock, leaving UK assets in the mire.

Sterling fell to ‌a five-week low and is down almost 2 per cent against the dollar this week, ​set for its biggest weekly drop since November 2024.

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer was in a battle to hold on to power after his health minister Wes Streeting resigned from government, while others positioned themselves ​to challenge his leadership, following disastrous local election results last week.

Markets are concerned that a new leader may be willing to loosen fiscal policy more, with British government borrowing costs up sharply again and UK bank stocks selling off on Friday.

Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham has been offered a path for a possible leadership challenge after ‌another Labour lawmaker said he would resign his parliamentary seat. If Burnham were to win ⁠the seat, he could then challenge for ⁠the party leadership.

“Market’s fear is that Burnham would be more ⁠left leaning, and we could see further ⁠increase in deficits,” ⁠said Jefferies economist Mohit Kumar.

“Our base case is one of a managed exit for Starmer and Burnham likely becoming the next PM,” he added.

The domestic political drama has coincided with ⁠another rise in energy prices on Friday and growing evidence that the economic damage from the Iran war is hurting.

U.S. inflation data this week has shown consumers and factories are starting to see big increases in price pressures as a result of the war, which has pushed up the price of crude by over 50 per cent.

The pound has tended to ⁠suffer against the dollar when tensions between Washington and Tehran flare or oil prices rise, given Britain’s dependence on energy imports and the economy’s sensitivity to higher fuel ⁠costs.

It was last down 0.3 per cent on the day at US$1.3364 after earlier touching US$1.3335, its lowest level ⁠in over ⁠five weeks.

British bond yields jumped across the curve. The 10-year yield was last up almost 12 basis ​points (bps) at around 5.11 per cent. Bond yields move inversely with ​prices.

Stocks also fell. The blue-chip FTSE 100 ‌was last down 0.6 per cent, while the more domestic-oriented FTSE 250 index ​of midcap stocks was down ​1.1 per cent.

UK banks were also down sharply, with Barclays and Lloyds down over 2 per cent each. — Reuters

Date: 15 May, 2026 5:00 pm
Source: Malay Mail

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