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Investing · Gilts

UK gilt yields + prices

The single most confusing thing about gilts (and bonds generally): yields and prices move in opposite directions. Yields up → prices down. Understanding this inverse relationship is the gateway to making any gilt or bond decision. Here's the mechanic, with worked examples on real UK gilts.

5-minute read

Gilt yields and prices move inversely because the coupon is fixed. If you buy a 4% coupon gilt at £100 and yields rise to 5%, new gilts paying 5% coupon are available — so your 4% gilt has to fall in price (to ~£95 ish, depending on remaining time to maturity) to compete. The yield-to-maturity (YTM) combines the coupon income and the capital gain/loss to maturity into a single annualised number. The yield curve shows YTMs across different maturities — currently upward-sloping (longer = higher yield, the normal "term premium" environment). Duration measures sensitivity: a 10-year duration gilt loses ~10% of its price when yields rise 1%.

Why yields and prices move opposite

The coupon is fixed in £. If market yields rise, holders of old (lower-coupon or lower-yielding) gilts are stuck with lower income than new buyers can get — so old gilts trade at a discount to bring the YTM up to market.

Worked illustration: you bought a 5-year gilt at £100 with 3% coupon. Market yields rise to 5%. New 5-year gilts are paying 5% coupon at £100. Why would anyone pay £100 for your 3% gilt? They wouldn't — your gilt has to fall to ~£91 so the buyer gets a 3% coupon + the £9 capital gain to maturity, equaling 5% YTM.

Yield-to-maturity (YTM) — the master metric

YTM is the single number that combines coupon income with capital gain/loss to maturity. Formula (intuitively):

YTM is the discount rate that makes:

Price = Σ [Coupont / (1 + YTM)t] + [Nominal / (1 + YTM)n]

where:
  Coupont  = coupon paid at period t
  Nominal   = £100
  n         = number of periods to maturity
  YTM       = solved iteratively

Result is approximate annualised "all-in" return if held to maturity
(assumes coupon reinvested at YTM — which doesn't quite work in practice,
but is a useful approximation).

In practice, you don't calculate YTM by hand. Bloomberg, broker platforms, and the DMO publish YTMs daily. Just understand that YTM combines:

The yield curve

The yield curve shows YTM for different maturities on the same axis. Three classic shapes:

Current UK gilt yield curve (May 2026, illustrative):

MaturityApprox YTM
1 year (TR25 area)~4.5%
2 years (TG26-TM27)~4.4%
5 years (TM30)~4.4%
10 years (TG35)~4.2%
20 years (TG45)~4.1%
30 years (TS55)~4.0%
50 years (TS75)~3.9%

The curve is mildly inverted (short rates slightly above long) — a feature of the post-2022 rate-rise environment in the UK.

Duration — measuring rate sensitivity

Duration measures how much a gilt's price changes when yields move 1%. The standard measure is "modified duration":

ΔPrice% ≈ −Duration × ΔYield%

So a gilt with modified duration of 8 will:
  - Lose ~8% in price if yields rise 1%
  - Gain ~8% in price if yields fall 1%

Approximation breaks down for large yield moves (convexity adjustment needed)
but is good enough for small moves.

Duration depends on coupon (lower coupon = higher duration) and time-to-maturity (longer = higher duration).

GiltMaturityCouponApprox duration
TR25~1 year0.25%~1.0
TG27~2 years0.25%~2.0
TM30~5 years4.0%~4.4
TG35~10 years4.0%~8.0
TG45~20 years4.0%~13.0
TS55~30 years1.5%~22.0
TS75~50 years1.5%~28.0

The very long-dated, low-coupon gilts have extreme duration — these were the worst-performing gilts in 2022 when yields rose from 1% to 4%, with some losing 50-65% of their price.

Why duration matters for retirees

A retiree holding £100,000 of long-dated gilts as "safe ballast" learned in 2022 that long gilts are not safe in the short term. The TS50 (Treasury 1.5% 2050) fell from ~£100 to ~£55 — a 45% loss — when yields rose from 1.5% to 4%.

The "ballast" rationale for gilts only works when:

See the gilts in retirement guide for the practical retirement application.

Dirty price vs clean price

One technical wrinkle. When you buy a gilt between coupon dates, the seller has accrued some interest. The "clean price" is what's quoted; the "dirty price" includes the accrued interest you pay the seller.

The accrued interest gets paid back to you in the next coupon. So economically you don't lose — but it does affect how much cash you need on hand to buy.

How to look up current gilt prices and yields

  1. DMO website: dmo.gov.uk publishes daily gilt prices and yields.
  2. Broker platforms: Hargreaves Lansdown, AJ Bell, Interactive Investor publish live prices for gilts they offer.
  3. Bloomberg / Refinitiv (professional): real-time data and analytics.
  4. FT.com: daily yield data for major gilt maturities.

Sources and methodology

Gilt prices and YTMs illustrative as of May 2026 — actual figures change daily. DMO is the authoritative source. Duration mathematics follow standard fixed-income theory (Fabozzi). The methodology page documents sources.

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