LONDON, May 22 (Reuters) - Medium and long-duration British government bond yields were on course for their biggest one-week fall in almost two and a half years on Friday as investors responded to mounting signs of an economic slowdown.
Having risen sharply last week to their highest in decades on worries about the turmoil within the governing Labour Party, yields on 10-, 20- and 30-year gilts were down by around 27 basis points since last Friday, the biggest one-week drop since December 2023.
Yields on gilts of those durations were down by about 4 basis points on the day, in line with a fall in yields on equivalent German debt although the drop in bund yields over the week was about a third of that for gilts. Official data published on Friday showed a bigger-than-expected fall in retail sales volumes in April after a plunge in purchases of fuel by drivers in response to a jump in prices caused by the Iran war. Other figures released this week have shown a surprisingly low inflation reading for last month, a fall in hiring and the most widespread drop in business activity in over a year. Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey said on Tuesday the rise in market interest rates since the start of the Iran war has given the central bank time to assess the economic impact of the conflict and he pointed to a weaker growth outlook.
Investors on Friday were pricing around 48 basis points of BoE monetary policy tightening by the end of the year, equivalent to less than two quarter-point hikes.
Mark Dowding, chief investment officer at RBC's BlueBay Asset Management, said assurances on borrowing by the person most likely to replace Keir Starmer as prime minister - Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham - had been welcomed by investors.
But "he remains committed to raising taxes and spending in a material way and we are very sceptical that this will go smoothly, if he does end up in 10 Downing Street later this summer," Dowding wrote in a note for clients.
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* European stocks on track for biggest weekly rise since early April


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(Alliance News) - European equities moved higher on Friday, on hopeful US-Iran discussions to end the war, moving oil prices lower.