The Daily BriefEvening Briefing · Monday 1 June 2026 · 13:00 BST
Evening Briefing · Monday 1 June 2026

Reeves Cost-of-Living Fiscal Headroom Tightens Further on Iran-Talks Suspension; Gilt Close 5.08%

Chancellor Rachel Reeves’s cost-of-living package lands into a measurably tighter Monday-close macro backdrop than the Friday calculation supported. UK 10-year gilt yields closed at 5.08% on the renewed US-Iran exchange, the Beirut Dahieh strikes and Iran’s suspension of indirect US talks; Brent crude closed at $98.20 a barrel after Friday’s $93.80 close. Friends of Reeves believe there is a world in which she survives a Burnham premiership; the Monday Iran escalation tightens that calculation. One Labour MP close to Reeves: “The biggest fear for the bond markets and the unions is Ed Miliband.”

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The 5p fuel-duty extension cancellation is locked until 31 December 2026. Inflation has slowed to 2.8% — the lowest in over a year — but the Brent rebound above $95 and now near $100 will start to reverse the inflation-easing path through the second half of 2026. The October Ofgem price-cap reset would now likely absorb less of the July 13% hike than Friday’s pricing implied; if Brent moves to $105-115 on a formal Iran framework collapse, the October reset reverses entirely. The Bank of England MPC’s next decision is now the binding macro variable; if Brent moves above $105, the next rate cut may be delayed. The Treasury’s fiscal-headroom calculation tightens directly with the gilt-yield reversal. Burnham’s allies have floated Energy Secretary Ed Miliband as his potential chancellor; Reeves’s allies counter that Miliband “would not be trusted by the bond markets”.

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