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The residence is permanent

The Residence Is Permanent. The Residents Are Not. A Trading Analysis of What Britain’s Political Instability Has Done — and Will Do — to GBP, Gilts and the FTSE. | Capital Street FX

June 27, 2026
Research Desk
The Residence Is Permanent. The Residents Are Not. A Trading Analysis of What Britain’s Political Instability Has Done — and Will Do — to GBP, Gilts and the FTSE. | Capital Street FX
The Residence Is Permanent. The Residents Are Not. A Trading Analysis of What Britain’s Political Instability Has Done — and Will Do — to GBP, Gilts and the FTSE.

Britain is not suffering a political crisis. It is suffering an identity crisis — a recurring failure to agree on what the country fundamentally is and who it is for. The market consequences are already visible: the pound is 12% below its pre-referendum level, gilt yields carry a 150-point premium above Germany, and the wealth exodus is accelerating — more millionaires and billionaires departed Britain in 2024 than any other country on earth. Capital, like confidence, does not wait for political resolution. This is not a modern problem. Historians and economists count at least six comparable episodes across Britain’s thousand-year history — three of which have detailed enough financial data to serve as precise market parallels, each time producing the same signature: prolonged currency weakness, elevated bond yields, equity underperformance — followed, when the identity question is finally resolved, by one of the most powerful sustained recoveries in financial history. The question for traders is not whether Britain will recover. It always has. The question is: how far along the crisis arc are we, and what does the historical price action tell us to expect from here?

GBP/USD
1.3220
−12% from pre-Brexit 2016 level · never recovered
10yr Gilt Yield
4.74%
+150bp premium above German bunds
FTSE 100
10,437
Masks domestic weakness · 30–35% discount vs S&P 500
PMs Since 2016
7
Cameron · May · Johnson · Truss · Sunak · Starmer · Burnham?
Millionaires Who Left UK (2024)
10,800
Highest outflow of any country globally · UAE, Italy, Switzerland primary destinations
Working-Age Britons Emigrated (2025)
246,000
91% working age · Business founders, professionals, investors
UK Unemployment
4.9%
Up 124,000 yr-on-yr · Youth unemployment 16.2% · Rising
CSFX Research DeskJune 25, 2026 GBP/USD · FTSE 100 · UK Gilts 7 Parts · 6 Trade Setups
Part I·The Central Message
I
What This Report Covers
Political Instability in the UK
Has a Direct, Measurable Impact
on GBP, the FTSE and Gilts —
Every Single Time

This is not a history piece with some market data attached. It is a market analysis that uses history as its primary dataset — because the history of British political instability and its impact on financial markets is one of the most precisely documented and consistently repeated patterns in global economic history. The pattern has repeated across the Wars of the Roses, the Reformation, the Civil War, the post-imperial adjustment of the 1960s and 1970s, the ERM crisis of 1992, the Brexit referendum of 2016, and the seven-prime-minister decade that followed. Each episode produced the same sequence in markets. Understanding that sequence — precisely and completely — is what this report is for.

Right now, as of June 2026, Britain has just seen its seventh Prime Minister in ten years resign from office. Keir Starmer left Downing Street on June 22, two years after winning the largest parliamentary majority in a generation, undone by the same structural problem that consumed Cameron, May, Johnson, Truss and Sunak before him. Andy Burnham is expected to become the eighth Prime Minister of the Brexit era within weeks. GBP/USD sits at 1.3220 — 12% below where it was the morning before the Brexit referendum result. The 10-year gilt yields 4.74% — carrying a 150 basis point premium above Germany that it has maintained persistently through every political transition since 2016. The FTSE 100 sits at 10,437, propped up by Shell, AstraZeneca and Rio Tinto, whose revenues are largely unaffected by whatever Westminster does. The FTSE 250 — which is affected — tells a different story.

These three market readings are not coincidences. They are the measurable financial consequence of a political crisis — and if you understand what kind of political crisis Britain is currently in, the historical record tells you, with reasonable precision, what comes next for each of them.

There is a fourth signal that does not appear in the daily FX feed but belongs in any serious assessment of Britain’s trajectory: the departure of capital at the human level. In 2024, Britain recorded the largest net outflow of millionaires and high-net-worth individuals of any country in the world — an estimated 10,800 individuals with investable assets above $1 million chose to relocate, predominantly to the UAE, Italy, Switzerland and Portugal. This is not a tax story alone, though the non-dom abolition accelerated the pace. It is a confidence story. Entrepreneurs, founders, and investors are making a multi-year bet with their personal balance sheets that Britain’s trajectory does not justify remaining. The financial damage is direct — every departing millionaire removes income tax, capital gains tax, consumption and investment from the UK base — but the reputational signal is equally significant. When the people with the most to invest vote with their passports, it registers in the institutional investment community. Britain’s political instability is not merely moving currency and gilt yields. It is quietly hollowing out the entrepreneurial and capital base that any sustained recovery will require.

What History Shows — Every Time the UK Enters Political Turmoil
The pound weakens. Gilt yields rise. The domestic economy underperforms. And when the crisis resolves — as it always has — each of these reverses with a force that is one of the most powerful patterns in financial history. Here is the precise record.
GBP / Sterling
During instability: Falls structurally and persistently. Not in one crash — in a grinding multi-year decline that resists every partial recovery attempt. The pound fell 30% in the twelve years of post-imperial crisis (1967–1979). It has fallen 12% since 2016 and made seven recovery attempts, each failing below the prior high.
After resolution: Recovers sharply and sustains. GBP/USD from 1.05 in 1985 to 2.00 by 1992. From 1.09 after Truss to 1.35 within three years. The recovery always outpaces the decline in percentage terms.
UK Gilts / Government Bonds
During instability: Yields run a persistent premium above comparable sovereigns — the bond market’s daily verdict on political risk. Currently 150 basis points above German bunds. During acute crises (Truss 2022) yields can spike 100bps in 48 hours. The UK gilt market is the most sensitive barometer of confidence in British governance in existence.
After resolution: The yield compression is extraordinary. Post-1979 settlement, UK gilt yields fell from 16% to 4% over 17 years — one of the longest bond bull markets in history. Anyone who bought long-dated gilts at the peak of political crisis made transformational returns.
FTSE / UK Equities
During instability: The FTSE 100 is misleading — 80% of its revenues are international, so it rises when sterling falls (currency translation effect). The FTSE 250 — 50% domestic — is the honest barometer. It consistently underperforms during political turmoil. UK equities lost 73% in real terms in 1973–74. The FTSE 250 fell 14% after Brexit and has underperformed the FTSE 100 every year since.
After resolution: The FTSE 100 launched in 1984 at 1,000 after the post-imperial settlement. It reached 6,930 by 1999 — a 593% gain in 15 years. Post-Black Wednesday, the index gained 200% in 7 years. The post-crisis British equity recovery is one of the most reliable patterns in the financial record.
Seven Parts — What Each One Answers
Part I (this section): The central message — what history proves about the market impact of British political instability. The data summary before the narrative.

Part II: Why does Britain keep having political chaos? Four drivers examined honestly — social division, economic deprivation, constitutional deadlock, and immigration as accelerant. One root cause identified.

Part III: Three historical precedents that structurally mirror the Brexit era — the Reformation Crisis, the Post-Imperial Adjustment, and Black Wednesday. With the numerical data for each: what GBP, bonds and the economy did before, during and after.

Part IV: The price action pattern that repeats across all three precedents — a consistent three-phase sequence for GBP, gilts and equities.

Part V: Where the current crisis sits against that pattern — and what signals would indicate movement to the next phase.

Part VI: The forward view — 1 month, 3 months, 1 year and 5 years. Bear, base and bull scenarios for GBP/USD, gilt yields and the FTSE at each horizon.

Part VII: Six specific trade setups — three for the current weakness phase, one conditional on the budget, two long-term recovery positions. Every trade has an entry condition, a duration, and a stop.
Part II·Four Drivers — One Root Cause
II
Four Drivers — One Root Cause
Why Does Britain Exhaust
Its Own Leaders? —
Four Drivers. One Root Cause.

To understand what kind of crisis Britain is in — and therefore what the historical parallels are and what the likely resolution looks like — we need to distinguish between three candidate explanations. Each is partly true. Only one is the root cause.

Explanation 1: Social Churning — The Divided Nation Thesis

Britain is, by almost any sociological measure, a deeply divided society. The Brexit referendum exposed divisions that had been building for decades: between London and the rest of England, between university graduates and school leavers, between those who had benefited from globalisation and those who felt left behind by it, between a cosmopolitan professional class and a culturally rooted working class, between Scotland (which voted Remain overwhelmingly) and the English regions that voted Leave in equally decisive numbers.

These divisions are real, documented, and politically consequential. The northern English towns that voted Leave in 2016 had genuine economic grievances: deindustrialisation since the 1980s, declining public services, falling relative wages, a sense that Westminster had stopped governing in their interest decades before the referendum gave them the opportunity to say so. The social churning explanation argues that Brexit was the vehicle, but the underlying cause was social and geographic inequality of a severity that any democratic system would struggle to accommodate.

What this explanation gets right: the social divisions are real and they fuel the political instability. What it gets wrong: France, Germany, the United States and virtually every comparable democracy have similar social divisions and do not change their governments at this rate. Social division is the kindling. It is not the fire.

Explanation 2: Economic Yearning — The Left-Behind Economy Thesis

A second explanation focuses on economics. Britain’s productivity growth has been the weakest in the G7 since 2008. Real wages in the bottom half of the income distribution have barely risen in twenty years in inflation-adjusted terms. Public services — the NHS, social care, education, transport infrastructure — have deteriorated across the period in which political instability has been highest. The IMF projects only 0.8% GDP growth for the UK in 2026, compared to 1.4% for France, 1.7% for the United States, and 1.1% for Germany. LSE research has quantified that Brexit reduced UK GDP by 2–3% permanently by 2019 — before the pandemic, before the energy crisis, before any of the subsequent political disruptions.

The economic yearning explanation argues that voters are rationally dissatisfied with their economic circumstances and express that dissatisfaction by removing governments. Seven Prime Ministers in ten years is, on this reading, simply the logical consequence of ten years of economic failure.

What this explanation gets right: economic failure is both real and politically destabilising. What it gets wrong: the economic failure is partly a consequence of the political instability, not only its cause. The chicken and the egg are entangled. More fundamentally, Britain has had periods of severe economic hardship — the 1930s, the 1940s, the 1970s — without anything like the rate of leadership turnover seen since 2016.

Explanation 3: Constitutional and Directional — The Identity Crisis Thesis

The explanation that the historical evidence most strongly supports is neither primarily social nor primarily economic. It is constitutional and directional: Britain’s political crises are most severe and most sustained when the country faces a question about its fundamental direction that produces two roughly equal and genuinely incompatible answers — and when neither answer can achieve the durable majority required to settle the question.

The Brexit referendum produced a 52:48 verdict on a question — Britain’s relationship with the European economic order — that had been building since Harold Macmillan’s first, failed application to the Common Market in 1963. It was not a decisive answer. It was a razor-thin mandate for a transformative change, followed by years of political attempt to implement a change that a substantial minority — in some polls a majority, after the economic consequences became visible — did not accept as settled.

This is not primarily a social problem, or an economic problem, though it has social and economic dimensions. It is a problem of political legitimacy: the country does not have a settled answer to the question of what it is trying to be. Until it does, it will continue to consume leaders who try to implement answers to a question that the country has not yet agreed to answer.

Explanation 4: The Immigration Accelerant — How Demographic Pressure Amplified Every Other Driver

There is a fourth explanation that the previous three underweight, and which became the decisive accelerant of British political instability after 2016. Immigration at the scale and composition the UK experienced between 2020 and 2023 did not merely add population. It added political fuel to every other fire already burning.

The numbers are stark. UK net migration hit a record 906,000 in the year ending June 2023 — a figure that would have been considered science fiction in political debate a decade earlier. By June 2024, approximately 13.1 million people living in the UK were born overseas, equivalent to 19% of the total population. Critically, the sharp rise after Brexit was driven almost entirely by non-EU citizens: 3.6 million non-EU nationals arrived between 2021 and 2024, while EU net migration turned negative — more EU citizens left than arrived. Brexit, paradoxically, did not reduce immigration. It redirected it — away from white European workers and toward a more diverse, more politically visible, more culturally distinct inflow.

The economic picture is genuinely mixed and should be read honestly rather than politically. Skilled Worker visa holders who entered in 2022–23 had a net positive fiscal impact of £16,300 in their first year. The OBR finds that lower migration has a negative impact on public finances, and a zero net migration scenario would leave UK GDP more than 15% below baseline by 2060. On aggregate, immigration is fiscally positive. But the aggregate conceals a distribution problem. The lowest-paid UK workers are most likely to face wage competition from migrants, while the highest-paid stand to gain. The people who voted Leave were disproportionately those absorbing the costs of migration, not those capturing the benefits.

The social and resource consequences compounded the economic ones. The migration surge of 2023 pushed up rents faster than inflation — a cost invisible in headline GDP but acutely visible to anyone renting in a British city. School places, NHS waiting lists, GP registrations — all strained by a population increase of a scale that infrastructure investment had not anticipated. The political consequence was predictable: 57% of Britons rated immigration as one of the most important issues facing the country in autumn of 2024, even as the numbers were already falling sharply.

The European context matters here. Britain is not unique in facing immigration-driven political instability, but it faces a particular version of the problem. Unlike Germany or France, which have experienced large-scale immigration for decades and developed multicultural institutional frameworks (imperfect but existing) to manage it, Britain had relatively low immigration until the early 2000s, then experienced one of the fastest demographic transitions of any major European economy within a single generation. The institutions, the housing stock, the public services, and critically the cultural expectations had not adjusted. The mismatch between the pace of demographic change and the pace of institutional adaptation is itself a source of instability — independent of whether any particular group of immigrants is economically net positive or negative.

The Four-Driver Summary — How They Interact
Driver 1 — Social division: Real, but not uniquely British. Other countries have similar divisions without similar leadership churn.
Driver 2 — Economic deprivation: Real, and self-reinforcing. Brexit-era underperformance has deepened the grievances that produced Brexit.
Driver 3 — Constitutional deadlock: The root cause. Britain voted 52:48 on a transformative question. The binary mandate cannot be implemented without alienating 48%. No leader can resolve this through personality or policy alone.
Driver 4 — Immigration: The accelerant. Demographic change at a pace institutions could not absorb converted latent social and economic discontent into acute political volatility — and remains a live electoral fault line under every future government.

These four drivers interact and reinforce each other. They will not be resolved separately. They will be resolved — as all comparable British crises have eventually been resolved — when a government finds a formula that is good enough for enough people to accept as settled. That formula has not yet been found.
The Immigration-Market Link — What Traders Need to Understand
Immigration has impacted British financial markets through three channels. First, political: the migration surge directly fuelled the electoral instability that produced seven Prime Ministers — immigration anxiety was the single largest driver of the Leave vote in 2016 and has remained electorally dominant. Every new government’s immigration policy signals something to markets about its broader fiscal and social direction. Second, fiscal: high-skilled immigration is a fiscal positive; low-skilled or dependent immigration is a fiscal cost. The composition of future migration flows directly affects the UK’s fiscal trajectory — and therefore gilt yields. Third, social: housing cost inflation driven by population pressure affects consumer spending, retail investment, and ultimately corporate earnings. A UK that manages demographic transition effectively is a different investment proposition than one that does not. None of this makes immigration simply good or bad for markets — it makes it a variable that needs to be tracked, not ignored.

“Every great British political crisis, examined carefully, turns out to be a fight not about policy but about identity. Who are we? What do we owe each other? What is our place in the world? When Britain cannot answer these questions, it cannot govern itself — and the market prices that uncertainty with remarkable precision.”

Capital Street FX Research · June 2026
Part III·Three Historical Parallels — With Data
III
The Historical Record — With Numbers
Three Times Britain Has
Been Exactly Here Before —
The Data for Each

Historians identify at least six episodes of comparable prolonged identity deadlock across Britain’s thousand-year history — the Anarchy (1135–1154, 19 years), the Wars of the Roses (1455–1487, 32 years), the Reformation Crisis (1529–1558), the Civil War and constitutional settlement (1642–1688), the post-imperial adjustment (1945–1979), and the ERM crisis (1990–1997). Of these, three have sufficiently detailed financial records to serve as rigorous market parallels for the current moment: a fundamental identity question unresolved for more than a decade, persistent currency weakness rather than a single acute crash, a bond market running a sustained risk premium, and domestic economic underperformance masking underlying institutional strength. These are not vague analogies. The data for each is available and comparable.

What the Historical Record Contains — and How This Report Uses It
Britain has experienced at least six prolonged identity and direction crises in recorded history — the Anarchy (1135–54, 19 years), the Wars of the Roses (1455–87, 32 years), the Reformation Crisis (1529–58, 29 years), the Civil War and Glorious Revolution (1642–88, 46 years), the Post-Imperial Adjustment (1945–79, 34 years), and the ERM Crisis (1990–97, 7 years). A seventh is now underway in the Brexit era. Each consumed multiple leaders. Each produced measurable economic damage. Each was eventually resolved. Each resolution was followed by a recovery.
This report draws on three of these six as financial market parallels — the Reformation, the Post-Imperial Adjustment, and the ERM Crisis — because these three have sufficient financial records (currency rates, bond yields, equity prices) for rigorous before/during/after market comparison. The three earlier crises are historically real and structurally comparable but their financial data is too fragmentary for the kind of precise market analysis this report requires.
The South Sea Bubble (1720) and East India Company crises — a separate but important class of evidence: These were financial and colonial governance crises, not prolonged identity deadlocks, so they are not counted among the six. But their resolution directly supports this report’s core argument. The South Sea Bubble’s aftermath produced Robert Walpole as Britain’s first effective Prime Minister, creating two decades of stable Whig governance (1721–1742). That stability — built on the constitutional foundation of the 1688 Glorious Revolution — directly enabled the East India Company’s expansion, British mercantilism, and what became the British Empire. The 150 years that followed were the greatest period of sustained prosperity any nation had achieved to that point in history. The sequence — identity crisis resolved → political settlement → institutional stability → economic expansion — is exactly the pattern this report identifies is waiting on the other side of the Brexit-era resolution.

Parallel 1 — The Reformation Crisis · 1529–1558 · 29 Years

The Identity Question: What religion is England — Catholic or Protestant? Every reign reversed the previous one. Henry VIII separated from Rome. Edward VI imposed radical Protestantism. Mary I reversed to Catholicism. No settlement lasted. The Brexit equivalent: What is Britain’s economic relationship with its nearest neighbours — EU-integrated or fully sovereign? Every Prime Minister has tried to implement an answer. None has held.

Metric Before (pre-1529) During Crisis (1529–1558) After Resolution (Elizabeth I, 1558+)
GBP / CurrencySterling stable. Silver content of shilling at full weight.Great Debasement: silver content reduced by 83% between 1544–1551. Effective devaluation of ~80%. Inflation hit 21% per year at peak. Gresham’s Law coined — bad money drove out good.Elizabeth I restored silver content fully by 1561 — within 3 years of accession. Currency stabilised for her entire 45-year reign. Antwerp risk premium on English credit disappeared.
Bonds / Debt CostEngland borrowed at ~10% on Antwerp market.English borrowing cost on Antwerp market rose to 14–16% as religious uncertainty made sovereign credit unreliable. Multiple forced loans from merchants.Elizabethan England’s credit cost fell to ~8% then to 5% by 1580s. England eventually ceased borrowing abroad — financed internally through established domestic market.
Economy / TradeEnglish wool trade ~£1.2M annually. Stable merchant class.Wool exports fell 30–40% during peak instability 1540s–1550s. Antwerp market periodically closed to English trade. Real wages fell sharply due to inflation.Elizabethan trade doubled in 25 years. East India Company 1600. Royal Exchange 1571. England became Europe’s most dynamic commercial economy.
Duration / Resolution29 years of crisis (1529–1558). Resolution was not victory for either side — Elizabeth found a formula both could accept. Recovery began immediately on settlement. Full economic flourishing took ~15 years.

Parallel 2 — The Post-Imperial Adjustment · 1945–1979 · 34 Years

The Identity Question: Is Britain a great power or a medium-sized open economy? Government after government tried to govern as though Britain retained great-power options — the nuclear deterrent, sterling as reserve currency, the world role — while the economic arithmetic made those options progressively unaffordable. The Brexit equivalent: Britain voted in 2016 as though it had a great power’s leverage over its nearest trading partner. It has spent ten years discovering it does not.

Metric Before (pre-1945 Bretton Woods rate) During Crisis (1945–1979) After Resolution (Thatcher, 1979+)
GBP/USD$4.03 (Bretton Woods fixed rate, 1945)1949: devalued to $2.80 (−30.5%). 1967: devalued to $2.40 (−14.3%). 1976 IMF crisis: fell to $1.57. 1985 post-Thatcher low: $1.0520. Total decline from 1945 rate: −74% over 40 years.$1.05 (1985) → $2.00 (1992). +90% recovery in 7 years. Sustained above $1.50 for most of 1990s–2000s. Never returned to $4.03 but identity as competitive open economy accepted.
10yr Gilt Yield~3% (1945, financial repression era)Rose steadily with inflation. Peaked at 16% in 1981 as Thatcher’s anti-inflation programme pushed rates to breaking point. Real yields negative throughout 1970s — gilts were a loss-making asset for two decades.16% (1981) → 8% (1986) → 4% (1998) → 3.5% (2007). 1,250bp compression over 25 years. Long-dated gilts delivered 20%+ annual returns in mid-1980s. UK bonds became world-class assets.
UK Equities (FTSE equivalent)UK equity index ~100 (1945 base)Real equity returns negative 1945–1975. UK equities lost 73% in real terms in 1973–74 alone — the worst single bear market in British history. UK persistently underperformed US, Germany, Japan.FTSE 100 launched Jan 1984 at 1,000. Reached 6,930 Dec 1999. +593% in 15 years — one of the strongest sustained equity rallies of any major market.
GDP vs PeersUK GDP among top 3 globally. Output per worker comparable to France and Germany.UK growth consistently below France, Germany, Japan. Described as “the sick man of Europe.” Inflation averaged 10%+ per year 1974–1982. IMF bailout 1976 at interest rate of 8.5%. National debt reached 80% of GDP.UK growth outpaced European peers 1982–2000. Productivity gap narrowed. London became world’s leading financial centre. UK rejoined top tier of G7 economies by competitiveness metrics.
Duration / Resolution34 years of structural adjustment (1945–1979). Resolution came when Thatcher forced the country to accept what it actually was. Not pleasant — unemployment peaked at 11.9% in 1984. But the recovery was complete and sustained. From resolution to market peak: 15–20 years.

Parallel 3 — Black Wednesday and the ERM · 1990–1997 · 7 Years

The Identity Question: Is Britain part of the European monetary order or not? Britain entered the ERM in 1990 at a rate (2.95 DM) the market considered unsustainably high. It spent two years defending an indefensible position before being forced out on September 16, 1992. The Brexit equivalent: The closest structural precedent to 2016 in timeframe — a binary political decision about Britain’s European relationship that the market then repriced. The key difference: the ERM crisis resolved in one day (Black Wednesday). Brexit is resolving over decades.

Metric Before (ERM entry Oct 1990) During / Black Wednesday (Sep 1992) After Resolution (1992–1997)
GBP/USD$1.96 (Oct 1990 ERM entry)Fell to $1.78 on Black Wednesday — −9% in one day. UK spent £3.3bn defending the parity. Rate raised to 15% then cut. Soros made £1bn shorting sterling.Stabilised at $1.50–$1.60. Found genuine fair value. Held above $1.60 for most of 1996–97. Political humiliation but economic relief — UK economy boomed 1993–2000 with cheaper sterling and lower rates.
Gilt Yield / Base RateBase rate at 14% (ERM constraint forced high rates)Base rate raised to 15% on Black Wednesday then cut to 10% same day. Gilt market had to reprice the entire UK rate path within hours.Base rate fell from 15% to 5.75% by 1997. 10yr gilt yields from 9.5% to 6.5% over five years. Bank of England independence 1997 locked in the gains permanently.
FTSE 100FTSE 100 at ~2,300 (Sep 1992)Fell then immediately recovered. FTSE actually rose 2.7% on Black Wednesday itself as markets priced in rate cuts.FTSE 100: 2,300 (Sep 1992) → 5,000 (Dec 1997) → 6,930 (Dec 1999). +201% in 7 years. One of the strongest post-crisis equity rallies in modern British history.
Duration / Resolution7 years from ERM entry to full resolution (Bank of England independence 1997). The crisis itself was one day. The political consequences (Conservative Party destroyed for 18 years) lasted far longer. Key lesson: acute resolution → immediate market recovery, even though cause was humiliating.

Where Brexit-Era Britain Sits Against All Three Parallels

Dimension Reformation
1529–1558
Post-Imperial
1945–1979
ERM/Black Wed
1990–1997
Brexit Era
2016–Now (10 years)
Crisis typeIdentity / religionIdentity / imperial declinePolicy / European alignmentIdentity + policy + immigration
Currency decline−80% (debasement)−74% over 40 years−9% in one day−12% from 2016 · −32% from 2015 peak · Never recovered
Bond yield impact+4–6% above peersPeaked at 16% — 8% above peersRate to 15% intraday+150bp above Germany — persistent since 2022
Leaders consumed5 monarchs (incl. Lady Jane Grey)7 Prime Ministers2 PMs (Thatcher, Major)7 Prime Ministers (Cameron → Burnham)
Elapsed so far29 years total34 years total7 years total10 years elapsed · No resolution signal yet
Estimated time to resolutionTook 29 years totalTook 34 years total7 years total, acuteBest case: 5–10 more years (if EU alignment found) · Base case: 10–20 more years · Worst case: 20–30 years
Post-resolution recoveryTrade doubled in 25 years. England became dominant commercial power.FTSE +593% in 15 years. GBP +90% in 7 years. Gilt yields fell 1,250bp.FTSE +201% in 7 years. GBP stabilised. 15 years prosperity.TBD — but history says: the recovery will be powerful. It always has been.
Part IV·The Market Signature
IV
Before · During · After
The Price Action
That Repeats —
Before, During and After

From the financial data available across the six comparable episodes — fragmentary for the medieval periods, increasingly precise from the 17th century, fully measurable for the modern ones — a consistent three-phase price pattern emerges. Understanding which phase you are in is the most important piece of market analysis available for British assets. Here it is, distilled from the record.

The Three-Phase British Crisis Pattern — Derived from Five Centuries of Data
Capital Street FX Research · June 2026
Phase 1 — During the Identity Crisis (where we are)
GBP
Structurally weak · grinding lower
Does not crash in one event. Weakens persistently against all peers. Partial recoveries on each new PM fail to hold. The market prices ongoing uncertainty, not any single event. Post-2016 sterling has made six attempted recoveries, each failing below the previous high.
Gilts (10yr yield)
Persistent risk premium · elevated vs peers
The gilt-bund spread runs persistently elevated — currently +150bp. Not catastrophic, but unrelenting. The bond market does not panic but it does not give back the risk premium until the political question is answered. Every new PM produces a brief rally that fades.
FTSE 100 / Equities
Resilient headline / weak domestically
The FTSE 100 mask: 75-80% international revenues mean it is not the right proxy for British political risk. The FTSE 250 — 50% domestic — consistently underperforms. The gap between the two is the market’s clearest expression of domestic pessimism.
Phase 2 — The Acute Event (the resolution attempt)
GBP
Acute spike lower then stabilise
At the moment of maximum acute crisis — the 1931 devaluation, Black Wednesday 1992, Truss 2022 — GBP falls sharply and violently. Then, if the resolution sticks, it stabilises and begins to recover. The acute event is the market forcing the political class to confront the question it has been avoiding.
Gilts (10yr yield)
Spike then rally sharply
Gilt yields spike during the acute event — sometimes dramatically (Truss: +100bp in 48 hours). But if the political response is credible (Hunt budget, BoE independence 1997), yields then fall sharply and sustainably. The acute spike is the market’s last warning before the resolution.
FTSE 100 / Equities
Initial fall · then recovery or rally
Equities fall in the acute event then recover. The FTSE 100 rallied 2.7% on Black Wednesday itself — because rate expectations fell. The pattern at major British political crises: equities are a leading indicator of the recovery, not a lagging indicator of the damage.
Phase 3 — After Resolution (what the historical record promises)
GBP
Sustained multi-year recovery
GBP/USD from 1.05 (1985 post-imperial low) → 2.00 (1992). From 2.20 DM post-Black Wednesday → 3.20 DM by 1997. From Truss low 1.0327 → 1.32 within 3 years. Every British political resolution has been followed by a sustained sterling recovery that outperforms the pace and scale of the preceding decline.
Gilts (10yr yield)
Sustained yield compression · 200–400bp
Post-imperial resolution: gilt yields from 16% (1981) to 4% (1998) — 1,200bp compression over 17 years. Post-Black Wednesday: base rate from 15% to 5% in 5 years. UK gilts become world-class assets again when the political risk premium unwinds. Capital gains on long-dated gilts in these periods are extraordinary.
FTSE 100 / Equities
Sustained outperformance · 30–50% above peers
Post-1979 Thatcher settlement: FTSE 100 +593% in 15 years. Post-1992 Black Wednesday resolution: FTSE +201% in 7 years. The post-crisis British equity recovery is one of the most reliable patterns in the financial data. When Britain resolves its identity question, capital returns rapidly.
The Most Powerful Phase 3 Recovery in British History — The One this report Has Not Yet Named
The Glorious Revolution (1688) resolved Britain’s 46-year constitutional crisis. Five years later: the Bank of England was founded (1694), the National Debt was created as a formal instrument, sterling was stabilised by Newton’s Coinage Act (1696), and the London stock market was formalised. Robert Walpole’s resolution of the South Sea Bubble crisis in 1721 produced two decades of stable governance. That stability — institutional, constitutional, financial — directly enabled the East India Company’s expansion, British mercantilism, and the age of exploration. What followed was approximately 150 years of the greatest sustained economic prosperity any nation had achieved to that point in history. This is what Phase 3 looks like when a British identity crisis is genuinely and durably resolved. The current analysis’s argument is simply that this pattern has repeated — and will repeat again.
Part V·Where We Are Now
V
The Current Reading
Measuring the Current
Episode Against
the Historical Pattern

Ten years after the Brexit referendum, the current readings on GBP, gilts and the FTSE can now be measured against the historical pattern with some precision. The conclusion is uncomfortable but clear: we are in the middle of Phase 1 — the sustained structural weakness phase — with no reliable signal yet that the identity question has been answered well enough to trigger Phase 3’s recovery.

1.3220
GBP/USD today
vs 1.50 pre-referendum · −12% permanently · 7 recovery attempts, each failed
4.74%
10yr Gilt yield
+150bp above German bunds · +324bp above pre-2016 UK levels · Persistent risk premium
10,437
FTSE 100
Held by Shell, AstraZeneca, Rio Tinto · 80% international revenues · Not a UK barometer
23,197
FTSE 250
The real domestic proxy · persistently underperforms FTSE 100 since 2016 · PMI 49.4 in contraction

The Seven PMs — Reading Each Transition as a Market Event

Each of the seven Prime Minister transitions since 2016 followed an identical market pattern: an initial GBP move lower of 2–5%, a brief gilt yield spike, a partial recovery over 2–6 weeks, and then a settled level below the pre-transition rate. The recovery has been partial in every case because the cause of the weakness — the unresolved identity question — was not addressed by the change of personnel. The seventh transition, from Starmer to Burnham, is following the same script.

Andy Burnham, who won the Makerfield by-election days before Starmer resigned and now stands as near-certain next Prime Minister, is a pragmatic northern English politician with a record for delivery in Manchester. He is not a Brexit ideologue, nor a European federalist. He represents, potentially, the kind of pragmatic centre that might eventually find the Elizabeth I formula — a settlement both sides can live with. But he has not yet announced the policies that would constitute that formula. The market is waiting. The market has been waiting for ten years.

The Key Diagnosis for Traders — Phase 1 Characteristics All Visible
✗ GBP structurally weak: 12% below pre-Brexit level, seven recovery attempts all failed below prior high. Phase 1 characteristic confirmed.
✗ Gilt premium persistent: +150bp above Germany, narrowing only briefly on each new PM then widening again. Phase 1 characteristic confirmed.
✗ FTSE 100 discount: FTSE 100 trades at ~30–35% discount to S&P 500 on comparable earnings — UK political risk premium embedded and persistent. Phase 1 characteristic confirmed.
✗ No resolution signal: Burnham’s Chancellor appointment, the Autumn Budget, and the long-term direction of UK-EU relations are all unknown. No Phase 2 trigger identified yet.
→ Conclusion: We are in mid-Phase 1. The trades that apply are Phase 1 trades — structural weakness positions — with alert orders set for Phase 2 triggers — which then open the door to Phase 3 recovery positions.

What Triggers Phase 2 — and How Phase 3 Follows

Phase 2 is the acute event: the moment when the underlying identity question forces a decision that the political class can no longer defer. It does not require a Prime Minister to be clever or competent. It requires a moment of unavoidable confrontation with reality — as Black Wednesday was in 1992, or as the Truss gilt crisis was in 2022. Phase 2 is often painful in the short term. It is always the necessary precursor to Phase 3.

The signals that would indicate Britain is entering Phase 2 — the acute resolution event — are specific. On the fiscal front: a Burnham Autumn Budget that either forces credible fiscal consolidation (positive Phase 2 — as Hunt’s November 2022 budget was) or triggers a gilt-pound crisis that forces it (negative Phase 2 — as Truss’s September 2022 budget did). Either way, the market forces a decision. On the structural front: a substantive UK-EU relationship development — not re-entry to the single market, but a meaningful trade access improvement that reduces the structural drag on UK productivity. Even the announcement of serious negotiations would constitute a Phase 2 signal for sterling. On the political front: 12–18 months of consistent policy direction without internal party challenge — evidence that the identity question has an answer the governing party will stand behind.

Phase 3 follows Phase 2 when the market accepts that the acute resolution was genuine and durable. In every comparable episode, Phase 3 began not when the resolution was announced but when the market decided it would hold. After Hunt’s November 2022 budget, it took approximately six weeks for the market to decide the fiscal consolidation was real. After Thatcher’s economic reforms, it took until 1982–83 — three to four years — before the market fully priced in the new direction. Phase 3 is not an event. It is a verdict. And the historical record shows it is worth waiting for.

The Tail Risk — What Accelerates Phase 1 Downward
The historical record contains episodes where Phase 1 deteriorated significantly before the resolution arrived. The post-imperial crisis saw GBP/USD fall to 1.57 (1976 IMF intervention), then 1.05 (1985 post-Thatcher trough), before the recovery. The risk case for current British assets is that Burnham’s budget disappoints, the gilt-pound correlation mechanism that Truss activated re-engages, and the market tests sterling at 1.25 or below before finding the catalyst for recovery. The bear case for GBP is not a crash. It is a continued, grinding, structurally-justified weakening that reaches 1.20–1.25 before the identity question is finally answered.

The Capital Exodus — When Political Instability Becomes an Economic Spiral

There is a consequence of prolonged political instability that does not appear in PMI surveys or GDP growth figures until it is already well advanced: the exodus of the business owners, entrepreneurs, and senior executives who generate employment, pay corporate taxes, and anchor investment decisions. Britain is now experiencing this in measurable terms — and the feedback loop it creates, from business departure to rising unemployment to weakened consumer spending to weaker corporate earnings to lower equity valuations, is one of the most dangerous dynamics a domestic equity investor can face.

The data is specific. 246,000 British citizens left the UK on a long-term basis in 2025, according to the ONS — 91% of them of working age. The Financial Times reported that thousands of company directors who are British nationals left the UK following the Labour government’s October 2024 budget. The driver is unambiguous: Capital Gains Tax on business asset disposals rose from 10% to 14% in April 2025 and rises again to 18% in April 2026. Business founders of service-based businesses are relocating to the UAE, Italy, Portugal and Cyprus — destinations chosen specifically for their more favourable tax treatment of business disposals and inherited wealth. Chris Ball, chief executive of Hoxton Wealth, described a “significant uplift” in people leaving since the October 2024 budget, with a “large proportion” being founders of service businesses.

The economic consequence of this departure is not merely the loss of the individuals themselves. It is the loss of their employment base, their supply chains, their corporation tax payments, and their investment in domestic growth. When a founder relocates to Dubai and manages their UK business remotely, the economic activity follows them: banking relationships move, professional services move, and eventually the business itself may move. The Resolution Foundation, citing Labour Force Survey data, attributes rising unemployment directly to the October 2024 National Insurance increase — particularly its impact on young workers. Youth unemployment stands at 16.2% in April 2026, up sharply from 14.3% a year earlier. RSM UK forecasts total unemployment peaking at 5.3% by year end 2026 — an 11-year high.

The Unemployment-Instability-Market Feedback Loop
The chain of consequences is now visible and accelerating. Step 1: Political instability and tax uncertainty cause business owners to leave or delay investment. Step 2: Reduced business activity and higher employer NI costs translate into hiring freezes and redundancies. UK unemployment has risen by 124,000 year-on-year to June 2026 (ONS). Step 3: Rising unemployment reduces consumer spending power, hits retail, hospitality, and services sectors — all FTSE 250 constituents. Step 4: Weakened domestic corporate earnings reduce dividend capacity and compress equity valuations. The FTSE 250 — already underperforming the FTSE 100 since 2016 — faces further de-rating as this loop tightens. Step 5: Higher unemployment increases fiscal pressure (benefits spending rises, tax receipts fall), widening the deficit and pushing gilt yields higher. Gilt yields at 4.74% compound the cost of servicing £2.7 trillion in national debt. Step 6: Higher debt costs squeeze public spending further, reducing the economic stimulus available to break the cycle. This is not a forecast. Each of these steps is already in motion.

The FTSE 100’s apparent resilience — 10,437 as of June 25, 2026 — is a structural illusion. Shell, AstraZeneca, HSBC and Rio Tinto collectively account for approximately 30% of the index and derive the overwhelming majority of their revenues from outside the UK. When sterling weakens, their pound-denominated earnings translate upward — the FTSE 100 often rises when the UK economy deteriorates, because a weaker pound inflates the sterling value of international earnings. This is why the FTSE 100 rose 8% in the first months after the Brexit referendum even as the domestic economy began to contract. The FTSE 250, by contrast, has 50% domestic revenue exposure. It fell 14% after Brexit and has underperformed the FTSE 100 in every year of political turbulence since 2016. The FTSE 250 at 23,197 is the correct instrument for expressing a view on UK domestic economic and political risk — not the headline index that appears on the morning news.

Part VI·The Forward View — Four Horizons
VI
What to Expect and When
GBP, Gilts and FTSE —
1 Month · 3 Months · 1 Year · 5 Years

The following outlooks are built from the convergence of three inputs: the historical pattern documented in this report, current macro and political data as of June 25, 2026, and specific analyst forecasts from primary sources. Three scenarios are given for each horizon. Probabilities reflect the weight of historical evidence, not certainty.

Horizon 1
1 Month · July 2026
Dominant variable: Burnham’s Chancellor appointment. Wes Streeting leads Polymarket at 70% and would signal fiscal continuity. Any Chancellor perceived as fiscally expansionary risks re-activating the gilt-pound crisis mechanism. The Truss precedent is fresh — the gilt market will react within hours of the announcement. Burnham is also expected to be confirmed as PM by approximately July 17. Until the Chancellor is named, GBP/USD is range-bound between 1.31–1.34 with downside bias. Political premium priced in; no catalyst for sustained rally.
Scenario Ranges · 1 Month
Bear (25%): Chancellor disappoints. GBP/USD breaks 1.31, tests 1.29. 10yr gilt breaks 5.00%. FTSE 100 −5–8%.
Base (55%): Orderly transition. GBP/USD 1.31–1.34. Gilt yield 4.55–4.85%. FTSE 100 10,200–10,700.
Bull (20%): Market-friendly Chancellor. GBP/USD 1.34–1.37. Gilt yield 4.30–4.55%. FTSE 100 +2–4%.
Horizon 2
3 Months · September 2026
Dominant variables: UK Q2 GDP data (due August), US Federal Reserve direction, Burnham government’s first policy announcements. The post-imperial parallel is instructive here: three months after Thatcher’s election in May 1979, GBP/USD had actually weakened (to $2.10 from $2.28) before beginning its ultimate recovery. The resolution’s initial phase often produces continuation of the structural trend before the reversal begins. PMI data for July and August will confirm whether the economic contraction deepens. If Q2 GDP prints negative, BoE rate cut expectations accelerate — positive for gilts, negative for sterling carry. The Nomura 125bp BoE-ECB differential narrowing trade begins to play through in this window.
Scenario Ranges · 3 Months
Bear (30%): UK enters technical recession. GBP/USD 1.27–1.31. Gilt yield 4.80–5.20%. FTSE 100 −8–12%.
Base (50%): Weak but not collapsing. GBP/USD 1.29–1.34. Gilt yield 4.40–4.80%. FTSE 100 range-bound.
Bull (20%): Burnham policy surprise + data resilience. GBP/USD 1.35–1.39. Gilt yield 4.10–4.40%.
Horizon 3
1 Year · June 2027
Dominant variable: Burnham’s October/November 2026 Autumn Budget. This is the most consequential single event in the 12-month window. The Hunt November 2022 budget template is clear: credible fiscal measures → GBP/USD 1.09→1.32 in 12 months (+21%). The inverse (Truss template): unfunded expansion → acute gilt-pound crisis within 48 hours. By June 2027, the market will have delivered its verdict on whether Burnham has found a sustainable fiscal framework. Additionally: Anthropic IPO (October 2026) and OpenAI IPO (late 2026/Q1 2027) will absorb enormous global capital flows — a risk-on environment that typically supports sterling. BoE likely to have cut rates twice by mid-2027 under base case, reducing carry support.
Scenario Ranges · 1 Year
Bear (25%): Budget fails. Gilt crisis re-activates. GBP/USD 1.22–1.27. 10yr gilt 5.20–5.80%. FTSE 100 −15–20%.
Base (50%): Budget credible. GBP/USD 1.30–1.38. Gilt yield 4.00–4.50%. FTSE 100 10,500–11,500.
Bull (25%): Budget + EU alignment signal. GBP/USD 1.38–1.45. Gilt yield 3.60–4.00%. FTSE 100 +15–22%.
Horizon 4
5 Years · June 2031
Dominant variable: whether Britain finds its Elizabeth I formula — a settlement on its EU economic relationship that both sides can accept. The five-year view is where the historical record is most confident. Britain has resolved every comparable identity crisis it has faced. The question is always when, not whether. The post-imperial parallel implies: if resolution comes within this window, the recovery in GBP, gilts and equities will substantially outperform current market pricing. Oxford Economics models that zero net migration would leave UK GDP 15% below baseline by 2060 — suggesting that immigration management, not restriction, is the fiscal-growth path. A Burnham government that manages the demographic transition competently (integrating productive immigrants, reducing housing pressure, investing in public services) while finding EU pragmatism on trade access could trigger Phase 3 recovery within this window. Historical evidence: every British post-crisis recovery has been faster and stronger than the consensus expected at the time of resolution.
Scenario Ranges · 5 Years
Bear (20%): No resolution. Continued drift. GBP/USD 1.15–1.25. Gilts at 5–6%. UK GDP growth 0.5–1% per year. Japan-style lost decade.
Base (50%): Partial resolution. GBP/USD 1.35–1.48. Gilt yield 3.00–4.00%. FTSE 100 +30–50% from today.
Bull (30%): Full EU alignment found. GBP/USD 1.48–1.65. Gilt yield 2.50–3.50%. FTSE 100 +60–100%. Post-1992 template repeats.
Part VII·Six Trade Setups — With Clear Entry Conditions
VII
The Positions — Built From History
Eight Trades —
When to Enter · How Long · Where to Exit

Each trade below specifies: the entry condition (what must happen before the trade is taken), the expected duration, the rationale tied directly to the historical analysis above, and specific stop and target levels with context. No trade should be entered without the stated condition being met.

Educational frameworks only · Not personalised investment advice · June 25, 2026 · All investments carry risk of loss.

Six Positions — Across Three Phases
Phase 1 — Now · Structural Weakness · Trades 01–04
Trade 01 · Short GBP/USD
Trade 02 · Long EUR/GBP
Trade 03 · Short FTSE 100
Trade 04 · Short UK Gilts (conditional)
Phase 2 — Budget Signal · Conditional · Trade 05
Trade 05 · Long GBP/USD on credible Autumn Budget
Phase 3 — GTC Orders · Long-Term Recovery · Trades 06–08
Trade 05 · Long GBP/USD at structural lows
Trade 06 · Long UK Gilts at yield peak
● Phase 1 Trades — Structural Weakness · Actionable Now
Trade 01 · GBP/USD · Short · Near to Medium Term · Phase 1
SHORT GBP/USD
Current rate: 1.3220 Entry condition: Available now — no trigger needed Expected duration: 2–6 months Historical basis: Phase 1 structural weakness lasts months to years across all three parallels
Short Sterling — The Identity Question Is Unanswered. The Historical Pattern Says the Currency Stays Weak Until It Is.
GBP/USD at 1.3220 has made seven recovery attempts since 2016 — each has failed below the prior high. The post-imperial parallel is the most instructive: sterling ground lower across 34 years (1945–1979) with multiple partial recoveries before the eventual resolution. Current fundamentals reinforce the structural thesis: PMI 49.4 in second contraction month, IMF forecasting only 0.8% UK growth in 2026, seventh PM transition underway, Chancellor appointment still unknown, Nomura sees BoE-ECB rate differential narrowing 125bp by end 2027 removing sterling’s carry support. Technically: symmetrical triangle breakdown, RSI at 36, 20-day EMA at 1.3351 acting as resistance. This is not a short-term news trade. It is a structural position reflecting an unresolved political identity crisis. Enter at current levels in three tranches. Hold until a Phase 2 reversal signal arrives (see Trade 04).
Current Rate
1.3220
Entry Zone
1.3150–1.3350
Stop Loss
1.3580
Target 1 (1–3M)
1.2950–1.3000
Target 2 (3–6M)
1.2650–1.2750
⚠ Stop at 1.3580 — above the 52-week high of 1.3547. A credible Chancellor appointment could take GBP to 1.34–1.36 before structural weakness resumes. Wide stop is essential — this is a multi-month position, not a day trade.
Trade 02 · EUR/GBP · Long · Near to Medium Term · Rate Differential Trade
LONG EUR/GBP
Current rate: ~0.8626 (GBP/EUR 1.1591) Entry condition: Available now Expected duration: 3–12 months Key catalyst: First BoE rate cut · Nomura 125bp BoE-ECB differential narrowing by end 2027
Long EUR/GBP — Captures Sterling Underperformance Against Its Closest Peer Without Dollar Noise
EUR/GBP is the cleanest expression of the UK-specific political and economic risk premium, because it isolates the UK against a directly comparable peer economy. The Nomura rate differential forecast is the mathematical foundation: 125bp narrowing (75bp ECB hikes, 50bp BoE cuts) directly erodes sterling’s remaining yield support. UK composite PMI at 49.4 versus Eurozone PMI recovering — the economic divergence supports EUR appreciation. EUR/GBP briefly spiked to 0.8700 on Starmer’s resignation before recovering to 0.8626 on orderly-transition optimism. That recovery is the entry opportunity — the structural driver is unchanged. Societe Generale’s Kit Juckes specifically targets a 1–2% move higher in EUR/GBP from current levels. Stop is placed below the 52-week low at 0.8286.
Current Rate
0.8626
Entry Zone
0.8580–0.8680
Stop Loss
0.8420
Target 1 (3–6M)
0.8800–0.8850
Target 2 (6–12M)
0.9000–0.9200
⚠ Eurozone recession would reduce the potency of this trade by weakening EUR simultaneously. Monitor Euro-area PMI monthly. If Eurozone PMI falls below 48, reduce position size by half.
Trade 03 · FTSE 100 · Short · Near to Medium Term · Political Risk De-Rating
SHORT FTSE 100
Current FTSE 100: ~10,437 Entry condition: Available now — domestic weakness thesis already in motion Expected duration: 3–12 months Basis: Business exodus + rising unemployment + political transition uncertainty
Short the FTSE 100 — The Political Risk De-Rating Trade. Not a View on the Index’s Companies, But on the UK Discount Embedded in Their Valuations.
The FTSE 100 at 10,437 appears resilient due to its international revenue composition — Shell, AstraZeneca and Rio Tinto alone account for nearly 30% of the index. But embedded within its valuation is a persistent UK political risk discount: the FTSE 100 trades at approximately 30–35% cheaper than the S&P 500 on comparable earnings multiples, a discount that has widened progressively since 2016. This is the trade: not a view on the quality of FTSE 100 companies (most are world-class), but on the political risk premium that compresses their UK-listed valuations. With unemployment rising year-on-year (ONS June 2026: +124,000), PMI in contraction at 49.4, and business owner exodus accelerating after the 2024 NI hike, the domestic economic deterioration documented in this report provides the bear catalyst. Every episode of prolonged UK political instability since 2016 has seen the FTSE 100 underperform the S&P 500 meaningfully. UK political uncertainty also weighs on sector-specific names: financials facing margin pressure, utilities facing nationalisation risk, domestically-oriented consumer stocks facing a squeezed consumer.
Current Level
~23,197
Entry Zone
10,200–10,600
Stop Loss
11,200
Target 1 (3–6M)
9,200–9,800
Target 2 (6–12M)
8,000–9,000
⚠ A credible Burnham budget that signals growth-positive policies could rally the FTSE 100 to 11,200+. Stop at 11,200 is essential. Exit if the Burnham budget is received positively by the market.
Trade 04 · UK 10yr Gilts · Short (Long Yield) · Conditional on Budget
SHORT GILTS · CONDITIONAL
Current 10yr yield: 4.74% Entry condition: DO NOT ENTER NOW · Trigger: 10yr yield breaks above 5.00% following adverse budget reception Expected duration: 4–12 weeks from trigger Probability of trigger: ~25% (bear scenario probability from Horizon 3)
Short UK Gilts — The Truss Trade Ready to Re-Launch If Burnham’s Budget Disappoints. The Market Will Tell You Within Hours.
Do not short gilts at current 4.74% — current yield already embeds significant political risk premium and a credible budget would rally gilts sharply. This trade activates only if Burnham’s Autumn Budget (October/November 2026) triggers a market reaction consistent with the Truss September 2022 playbook: gilt yields breaking above 5.00% while GBP falls simultaneously. That combination — yields up + GBP down on a budget day — is the definitive signal of fiscal credibility failure. At that point, the historical precedent is clear: yields can move 100bp in 48 hours. Target 5.20–5.50%. The stop is a yield fall back below 4.60% — which would signal the market has decided the initial reaction was an overreaction and a resolution is being found. Monitor: budget scheduled October/November 2026. Set alerts now.
Current Yield
4.74%
Trigger to Enter
Yield > 5.00%
Stop Loss
Yield < 4.60%
Target 1 (weeks)
5.20–5.40%
Target 2 (tail)
5.50–5.80%
⚠ Do not pre-position ahead of the budget. A credible budget would rally gilts to 4.20–4.40% and produce a GBP/USD rally to 1.34+, making this trade an immediate loser. The trigger is the gate.
● Phase 2 Trade — Budget Signal · Conditional on Positive Reception
Trade 05 · GBP/USD · Long · Conditional on Credible Autumn Budget · Medium Term
LONG GBP/USD · CONDITIONAL
Current rate: 1.3220 Entry condition: Burnham Autumn Budget (Oct/Nov 2026) received positively — gilts rally AND GBP rises on budget day Expected duration: 6–18 months from entry Template: Hunt budget Nov 2022 → GBP/USD 1.09→1.32 in 12 months (+21%)
Long GBP/USD on Budget Credibility — The Hunt Template Applied to Burnham. If He Delivers, This Is the Best Trade in This Report.
Jeremy Hunt’s November 2022 emergency budget — after Truss had destroyed market confidence — triggered one of the most powerful short-term GBP recoveries in modern history: GBP/USD from 1.09 to 1.32 in 12 months (+21%). The mechanism was a Phase 2 signal: fiscal credibility restored, gilt-pound crisis mechanism disarmed, political risk premium partially unwound. If Burnham delivers an equivalent budget — specific revenue measures covering spending commitments, no unfunded borrowing, a credible debt trajectory — the same mechanism applies. The market’s verdict will be immediate: gilts and GBP both rally on the day if the budget is credible, both fall if it is not. Entry after that signal only. Do not position ahead of the event. The pre-budget positioning risk is asymmetric — a credible budget from current levels produces a 3–5% GBP move; a Truss-style failure produces a 5–10% move against you.
Entry (post-budget)
1.2900–1.3250
Stop Loss
1.2700
Target 1 (6M)
1.3700–1.3900
Target 2 (12–18M)
1.4200–1.4500
R:R
1:2.5–4
⚠ Do not enter before the budget. The path from now to the budget entry could see GBP fall to 1.27–1.29 first (bear 3-month scenario). If so, the eventual budget-day entry becomes even more favourable.
● Phase 3 Trades — Recovery · GTC Orders to Set Now · 2–5 Year Holds
Trade 06 · GBP/USD · Long · Phase 3 Recovery · GTC Order · 2–5 Years
LONG GBP/USD · GTC · LONG TERM
Current rate: 1.3220 GTC entry: 1.2500–1.2800 — set limit orders today, fill expected 6–24 months Expected duration after fill: 2–5 years Historical basis: GBP/USD from 1.05 (1985 post-imperial low) → 2.00 (1992) = +90% in 7 years
Long GBP/USD at Structural Lows — The Generational Trade That Every British Crisis Has Eventually Produced. Set the Order and Wait.
The post-imperial parallel is the cleanest precedent: GBP/USD fell from $4.03 in 1945 to $1.05 in February 1985 — a 74% decline over 40 years as the identity crisis ground through its arc. The recovery from that low was +90% in 7 years. The comparable entry point for the Brexit era — where the structural downtrend meets historical support and where the asymmetry between downside (further 10–15 pence) and upside (25–45 pence on resolution) becomes compelling — is 1.2500–1.2800. The Truss low of 1.0327 (October 2022) established the floor of acute crisis. The 1.25 level represents a 50% decline from pre-Brexit 1.50 — historically consistent with the trough of comparable British identity crises. Set good-until-cancelled limits at 1.2650 and 1.2500 today. If they never fill, no harm done. If they fill, you are positioned for the eventual recovery that the historical record says is coming.
GTC Entry
1.2500–1.2800
Stop Loss
1.1900
Target 1 (2yr)
1.3800–1.4200
Target 2 (5yr)
1.4800–1.6000
R:R to T2
1:6–10 from 1.26
⚠ Bear case: UK does not resolve the identity question within 5 years. GBP remains in 1.20–1.35 range. Still a useful range trade. The GTC entry at 1.26 captures the bottom of that range. Size as a long-term allocation, not a leveraged bet.
Trade 07 · FTSE 100 · Long · Phase 3 Recovery · GTC Order · 3–5 Years
LONG FTSE 100 · GTC · POST-RESOLUTION
Current FTSE 100: 10,437 GTC entry: 8,500–9,500 — set limit orders now Expected duration after fill: 3–5 years Historical basis: FTSE 100 launched at 1,000 (Jan 1984). Reached 6,930 by Dec 1999. +593% in 15 years following post-imperial resolution.
Long FTSE 100 at Post-Crisis Lows — The Recovery Trade That Every British Political Resolution Has Eventually Produced. Set the Order Today.
The FTSE 100 at current levels appears resilient only because of its international revenue composition. The underlying UK political risk premium embedded in valuations is real and measurable — in the discount at which FTSE 100 trades relative to the S&P 500 on comparable earnings multiples (currently approximately 30–35% cheaper). When the Brexit-era identity question resolves — as Britain’s comparable identity crises have always eventually resolved — two things happen simultaneously: the political risk premium unwinds (international capital returns), and the pound strengthens (which paradoxically can reduce FTSE 100 earnings in sterling terms on first reading). The correct entry is therefore during a period of maximum pessimism — when a fiscal crisis or gilt shock has driven UK equities to a level that embeds full political catastrophe in the price. The historical template: FTSE 100 launched in January 1984 at 1,000 after the Thatcher resolution, reached 6,930 by December 1999 — 593% in 15 years. Post-Black Wednesday, from 2,300 to 6,930 — 201% in 7 years. The GTC entry at 8,500–9,500 represents a 9–19% decline from current levels — achievable under the bear scenario for the 1-year outlook — and positions for the eventual multi-year recovery that all three historical parallels confirm will come.
Current Level
10,437
GTC Entry Zone
8,500–9,500
Stop Loss
7,800
Target 1 (2–3yr)
11,500–13,000
Target 2 (5yr)
14,000–18,000
⚠ If the FTSE 100 does not reach 8,500–9,500 (base scenario holds above 10,000), the GTC orders do not fill. No harm done — the trade never activates under that scenario. Do not chase into current prices.
Trade 08 · UK 10yr Gilts · Long (Long-Dated) · Phase 3 Yield Compression · GTC
LONG GILTS · GTC · LONG TERM
Current 10yr yield: 4.74% GTC entry: Buy if 10yr yield reaches 5.00–5.50% · Set limit orders to buy now Expected duration after fill: 3–7 years Historical basis: UK gilts 16% (1981) → 4% (1998) = 1,200bp compression · extraordinary capital gains on long paper
Long UK Gilts at the Yield Peak — The Most Profitable Trade in This Report If History Repeats. The Highest-Conviction Long-Term Position.
The post-imperial parallel produced the most powerful long-dated gilt trade in modern British history: UK 10-year gilt yields fell from 16% in 1981 to 8% in 1986 to 4% in 1998. An investor who bought 25-year gilt paper at the 1981 yield peak of 16% and held for 10 years made approximately 300% in nominal capital gains, in addition to the coupon. The current situation offers a structurally similar setup, albeit at lower absolute yield levels. At 4.74%, UK 10yr gilts already carry a 150bp premium above Germany — a premium that will compress when the political risk resolves. The GTC strategy: set a limit order to buy if the 10yr yield reaches 5.00–5.50% (which the bear scenario says is possible if the budget disappoints). At that level, buying a 10-year UK gilt locks in a yield that, based on every prior British crisis resolution, will compress to 2.80–3.80% over the subsequent 5–7 years, producing 25–40% capital appreciation on the bond price in addition to the coupon. The stop is a yield above 6.00% — implying a fiscal crisis beyond the scope of prior British experience.
Current Yield
4.74%
GTC Buy at Yield
5.00–5.50%
Stop (yield)
Above 6.00%
Yield Target (5yr)
2.80–3.80%
Est. price return
+25–40% on 10yr
⚠ UK fiscal deterioration could push yields above 5.50% before the resolution. Scale in tranches — buy at 5.00%, add at 5.25%, add at 5.50%. Do not commit full allocation at the first trigger level.
FAQ·Frequently Asked Questions
FAQ
Your Questions — Answered
Five Questions Traders Ask
About Britain’s Instability —
and What the Data Actually Says
Q1
Does Britain’s leadership turnover actually move financial markets, or is it just political noise?

It moves them — measurably and repeatedly. The data across three fully documented historical parallels shows the same sequence every time: persistent sterling weakness, elevated gilt yields running a sustained risk premium above comparable sovereigns, and domestic equity underperformance. These are not anecdotal. GBP/USD fell 74% across the post-imperial adjustment period (1945–1985). Gilt yields reached 16% during the same era’s peak instability. The FTSE 250 — the honest domestic barometer — fell 14% after the 2016 referendum and has underperformed the FTSE 100 consistently ever since. What political noise looks like is a sharp move that reverses quickly. What structural instability looks like is a grinding multi-year pattern — and that is precisely what British markets have been producing since 2016.

Q2
Will GBP recover, and if so, how much and over what timeframe?

The historical record says yes — consistently and substantially. After the post-imperial adjustment resolved in 1979, GBP/USD recovered from $1.05 to $2.00 within seven years, a 90% gain. After the ERM crisis of 1992, sterling stabilised and UK markets re-rated sharply within two years. The recovery in each case began not when the underlying economic problems were solved, but when the political identity question was settled enough for investors to price in resolution. The base scenario for the current cycle — a partial Brexit accommodation that enough of the country accepts as settled — points to GBP/USD reaching 1.35–1.48 over a 1–5 year horizon. A full resolution brings 1.48–1.65. The caveat is that resolution has not yet arrived. Until a government achieves it and demonstrates durability, the pound remains a trading range asset with a structural ceiling.

Q3
Why does the FTSE 100 keep rising when Britain’s politics are so unsettled? Isn’t that a contradiction?

It is not a contradiction — it is a composition effect. Approximately 80% of FTSE 100 revenues are generated outside the UK. When sterling weakens, those overseas earnings translate back into more pounds, mechanically lifting the index in sterling terms. Shell, AstraZeneca, Rio Tinto, HSBC and Unilever — the index’s heavyweights — are essentially global companies that happen to list in London. The FTSE 100 rising during periods of sterling weakness is not a vote of confidence in Britain. It is an accounting consequence of currency depreciation. The honest measure of domestic UK equity health is the FTSE 250, which derives roughly half its revenues from within the UK. The FTSE 250 tells a very different story — persistent underperformance since 2016, a 14% fall after the referendum, and a sustained discount to both the FTSE 100 and to European mid-cap peers. Traders who conflate FTSE 100 strength with British economic confidence are reading the wrong index.

Q4
How long does British political instability typically last before markets see a sustained resolution rally?

The three fully documented parallels give a range of 7 to 34 years for the instability phase itself. The ERM crisis (1990–1997) resolved in 7 years — the shortest because the resolution was binary: Britain left the ERM and the question of European monetary participation was settled, at least for a generation. The post-imperial adjustment (1945–1979) lasted 34 years because the identity question — whether Britain was still a great power — required a full generational shift before the country could accept what the arithmetic had already shown. The Reformation Crisis (1529–1558) lasted 29 years and resolved only when Elizabeth I found a formula that neither side could fully reject. The Brexit era began in 2016 and is now in its tenth year. On the short precedent (ERM), resolution could come within the next 1–3 years. On the long precedent (post-imperial), it could run another decade or more. The critical variable is not time — it is whether any incoming government achieves a settlement durable enough to attract institutional capital back into sterling assets.

Q5
Are UK gilts worth holding right now, given the political risk?

At 4.74%, UK 10-year gilts carry a 150 basis point premium above German bunds — a premium that is entirely attributable to political risk, not to any fundamental difference in long-run sovereign creditworthiness between the two economies. That premium is itself the opportunity. The historical record shows that when British political identity crises resolve, the yield compression is extraordinary: from 16% to 4% over 17 years in the post-imperial case; from 14–16% borrowing costs to 5% in the Elizabethan settlement. The risk to holding gilts now is not default — UK sovereign default risk is negligible — but further yield widening if a budget disappoints or a fiscal shock materialises. The trade setup outlined in this analysis addresses that directly: do not buy gilts at current levels, but set limit orders to buy if the 10-year yield reaches 5.00–5.50%. At that level, the entry locks in a yield the resolution cycle will almost certainly compress — producing both income and substantial capital appreciation on long-dated paper.

Conclusion·The Pattern Always Resolves
VIII
The Final Word
Britain Has Been Here Before.
It Has Always Found a Way Through. —
What That Means for Traders Today

The residence at Number Ten is permanent. The institution of British governance — the Crown in Parliament, the common law, the independent judiciary, the Bank of England, the civil service — is older, more resilient and more durably functional than any of the seven individuals who have occupied that building in the past decade. What has changed is not the machinery of British statecraft. What has changed is the country’s ability to agree on what to use that machinery for.

That disagreement is not permanent. Every comparable episode in Britain’s thousand-year history has resolved — not because the losing side was defeated, but because a settlement was eventually found that enough people could accept as workable. The Elizabethan religious settlement was not a triumph of Protestantism over Catholicism. It was a formula ambiguous enough for most people to live under. The Thatcher resolution was not a triumph of the free market over the postwar consensus. It was an acknowledgement of what Britain’s economic arithmetic actually permitted. Every resolution has followed the same logic: not victory, but sufficient consensus for governance to resume.

The financial consequences of that resumption — in each case — have been among the most powerful market events in the record. Sterling recoveries measured in the tens of percent. Gilt yield compressions spanning hundreds of basis points over years. Equity re-ratings that rewarded those who held positions through the instability with returns that outpaced every other major market in the subsequent cycle.

Britain in June 2026 sits at a moment that the historical pattern identifies as late-instability — not yet resolution, but close enough that the instruments of eventual recovery are already identifiable and priceable. The pound at 1.3220 embeds a political risk discount. The gilt at 4.74% carries a 150-point premium above Germany that has no fundamental justification other than political uncertainty. The FTSE 250 trades at a sustained discount to European mid-cap peers that will close when the uncertainty clears.

The trade setups in this analysis are not speculation on a political outcome. They are positions structured on the basis of what has happened, across multiple documented episodes, every time a comparable British identity crisis has moved from its instability phase toward resolution. The entry conditions are specific. The stops are defined. The historical return templates are there in the data.

“The question for traders is not whether Britain will recover. It always has. The question is whether you are positioned to participate when it does — or whether you will read about the recovery in retrospect and wonder why you hesitated.”

Capital Street FX Research Desk · June 2026
The Three Things to Watch — Signals That the Pattern Is Shifting
Signal 1 — A budget that the gilt market accepts: If the Burnham government’s first budget passes without a yield spike above 4.90%, the market has judged fiscal credibility restored. That is the trigger for Phase 2 to begin in gilts and sterling.

Signal 2 — A durable trade or regulatory arrangement with the EU: Not a full reversal of Brexit — that is not politically available. A pragmatic accommodation on goods, services, or financial equivalence that enough of the country accepts as settled. Any announcement in this direction is a sterling catalyst of the first order.

Signal 3 — The FTSE 250 beginning to outperform the FTSE 100: When domestic UK equities begin to close the gap with the international-revenue FTSE 100, it signals that professional investors are starting to price in political risk reduction. Watch the ratio. It has been moving against domestic exposure since 2016. When it turns, the direction change is meaningful.
C
Written By
Capital Street FX Research Desk
The Capital Street FX Research Desk covers global macro strategy, political economy, and long-cycle market analysis. Historical financial data sourced from the Bank of England, the UK Public Record Office, the New London Monetary and Financial History database, and academic economic history publications. Current market data as of June 25, 2026. Analyst views attributed to Societe Generale (Kit Juckes), Nomura, and Deutsche Bank are sourced from publicly available media reports and represent the views of those institutions. This report is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute personalised investment advice.

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Risk Disclosure — This report is produced by the Capital Street FX Research Desk for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute financial advice or a solicitation to buy or sell any financial instrument. Historical market data is sourced from the Bank of England, academic economic history databases, and publicly available records. Current market data reflects publicly available information as of June 25, 2026. All trade setups are hypothetical illustrative scenarios for educational purposes only. Past patterns do not guarantee future outcomes. Trading leveraged instruments involves significant risk of loss including total loss of capital. Analyst views attributed to Societe Generale, Nomura, and Deutsche Bank are sourced from public media reports and represent those institutions’ views only. Capital Street FX accepts no liability for any loss arising from reliance on this content.