Find a property
Find a property
Find a property

From modern apartments to character country houses, start the journey to your dream home.

Sell or let
Sell or let
Sell or let

As local experts with global reach, we’ll help you find the right buyer or tenant for your property.

Services
Services
Services

We offer a full range of property-related services. From financing to interiors, we’ve got you covered.

People & offices
People & offices
People & offices

Our team of more than 20,000 people operates across 600 offices in over 50 markets around the globe.

Insights
Insights
Insights

Delve into our publications and reports for lifestyle trends and on-the-pulse market knowledge.

Leading Indicators | Spring signals; green shoots emerging?

Here we look at the leading indicators in the world of economics. For in-depth analysis into commodities, trade, equities and more.

Written by:
Written by:

1 min read

Spring green shoots potentially emerging for UK economy

Chancellor Rachel Reeves delivers the Spring Statement today with an estimated £22bn of headroom against her fiscal rule, largely driven by stronger‑than‑expected tax receipts since the Autumn Budget. For markets, the importance lies less in the headline figure and more in what it signals - borrowing is running below expectations, shaping expectations for lower near‑term gilt supply and lending greater credibility to the government’s medium‑term fiscal rule.

 

Lower gilt issuance should temper bond market fears, continuing the post-budget trend

That improved fiscal backdrop is shaping expectations for gilt supply. The FT reports that major investment banks now forecast around £247bn of gilt sales in the fiscal year to March 2027, based on the average of 7 estimates. That compares with roughly £304bn this year, nearly a -20% drop. If delivered, it would be the first annual fall in 4 years and the lowest level in 3. After an extended period of heavy gilt supply, a lower issuance should relieve some pressure on the market and help contain borrowing costs, providing a more supportive rates backdrop for UK CRE.

 

Financing conditions turn most supportive since late 2024

Meanwhile, UK gilts have continued to rally since the Autumn Budget. Ten‑year yields, which briefly rose above 4.9% last year, a 16‑year high, have fallen back to just above 4.3%. The move has been mirrored in swaps, with the 5-year rate around 3.52%, its lowest level since September 2024, and down c. -30bps since last month. For leveraged CRE buyers, this marks the most favourable financing environment since late 2024, albeit one that remains sensitive to geopolitical and global macro shifts.  

£22bn

Chancellor Rachel Reeves delivers the Spring Statement today with an estimated £22bn of headroom against her fiscal rule

£246bn

Major investment banks now expect around £247bn of gilt issuance in FY 2026–27

 

3.52%

  5-year SONIA swap rate (27/02/26)  

Download the dashboard for in-depth analysis into commodities, trade, equities and more.

Get the latest updates.

Sign up to Knight Frank Research.

Your details

Thank you
for getting in touch

A member of our team will be in touch with you as soon as possible to discuss your enquiry.

We look forward to speaking with you soon.

We take the processing and privacy of your information very seriously. Your data is collected and used in accordance with our terms and conditions and global privacy policy.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply.

Sorry!
An unexpected error has occurred.

Please try again later.

Sending your message...
Sending your message...