By Linda Pasquini

(Reuters) -A string of policy U-turns has blown a hole in the UK government’s budget plans, bringing sterling’s stellar run against the dollar and a period of stability in UK bond markets to a halt and prompting analysts to predict more weakness ahead.

UK gilts suffered their biggest one-day selloff since April’s U.S. tariff turmoil on Wednesday and sterling tumbled as speculation about finance minister Rachel Reeves stepping down added to uncertainty over the fiscal policy outlook.

It’s a backdrop that suggests the best days for sterling, which had been sailing at 3-1/2-year highs against the dollar, may be in the past, even as markets stabilised on Thursday.

For UK gilts, which at one point on Wednesday saw selling on a scale that drew parallels with 2022’s budget crisis in the short-lived premiership of Liz Truss, the vulnerability of bonds to fiscal unease was laid bare.

“Of all our updated forecasts this month, the one that receives the most radical surgery is our projection for sterling,” said Nick Rees, head of macro research at Monex Europe. He expects sterling to weaken to $1.33 in six months from around $1.37 now.

“Underpinning this shift is a fundamental change in view on the outlook for the UK public finances.”

Sterling is sitting on a roughly 9% gain against the dollar for the year so far as heightened policy uncertainty under U.S. President Donald Trump prompts global investors to diversify away from U.S. assets.

But it’s down around 4% against the euro and 5% against the Swiss franc amid growing investor angst over weakening growth and fiscal uncertainty one year on from the ruling Labour party’s landslide election win.

“Ultimately, (Prime Minister Keir) Starmer may be pushed into announcing a commitment to raise taxes in the Budget this autumn,” said RBC BlueBay Asset Management Chief Investment Officer Mark Dowding.

Monex’s Rees said he expected sterling to decline nearly 10% against the euro over the next 12 months. The euro was last trading at around 86.35 pence.

The outlook for public finances has deteriorated after Starmer gave in to pressure from within his party – and from the poll-topping Reform UK party – to soften welfare spending cuts.

A partial U-turn on tighter rules for long-term sickness and disability benefits will reduce savings by around 3 billion pounds ($4.1 billion) a year, while a decision to restore winter energy subsidies for some pensioners will cost around 1.5 billion pounds, according to think-tank estimates.



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