差价合约(CFD)是复杂的工具,由于杠杆作用,存在快速亏损的高风险。81.8% 的散户投资者在于该提供商进行差价合约交易时账户亏损。 您应该考虑自己是否了解差价合约的原理,以及是否有承受资金损失的高风险的能力。
Pepperstone logo
Pepperstone logo
UK

A Budget Short On Surprises

Michael Brown
Senior Research Strategist
2024年3月6日
What will likely prove to be the final Budget before the next UK general election passed, largely, without event, with the majority of announced measures being in line with those that had been widely-trailed before Chancellor Hunt reached the despatch box, and few – if any – policy surprises being delivered.

Overall, it seems unlikely that the Budget will substantially move the needle in terms of the UK economic outlook. While tax cuts were delivered, namely via a second straight 2pp cut to employee national insurance, and some tweaks to the child benefit regime, such moves seem unlikely to substantially shift the balance of risks facing the economy, which continues to display relatively anaemic growth, even if the recession into which UK Plc. fell at the end of 2023 is likely already over. Naturally, fuel duty was also frozen, as it has been every year since 2011, while many will also cheer the freeze in alcohol duty for the next 11 months.

Nevertheless, in a reflection of the continued fragile state of the public purse, these modest tax cuts – which amount to a giveaway of just under £13bln in the 2024-25 fiscal year, and around £10.5bln in the following 12 months – were accompanied by an incredibly long list of tax increases. Thee include a new duty on vaping, higher tobacco duty, higher airfare duty, removal of tax relief on holiday lets, an extension of the oil & gas profits levy, and the abolition of the ‘non-dom’ tax regime.

For a ‘tax cutting’ budget, that is a very, very long list of tax hikes. Furthermore, the Budget produced no traditional ‘rabbit out of the hat’, with the UK’s rather perilous fiscal backdrop meaning that both the rabbit, and the hat, were presumably unaffordable.

Preview

The OBR’s latest economic forecasts, which as always must be taken with a healthy pinch of salt, paint a picture of why said increases were deemed necessary. When all Budget measures are considered, the OBR see the Government meetings its fiscal rules with just £9bln of headroom, far less than the historical average, and leaving little further wriggle room for any further pre-election tax cuts that the Chancellor may wish to deliver in the autumn.

Sticking with the OBR, the body produced a surprisingly upbeat economic outlook. Headline inflation, per CPI, is seen falling back below the 2% target within the next few months, broadly in line with the BoE’s expectations, with the aforementioned fuel and alcohol duty freezes both knocking around 0.2pp off headline inflation over the next year.

On growth, the OBR painted an outlook that is significantly more bullish than both the BoE, and the sell-side consensus. This year, the OBR see growth of 0.8%, double the sell-side consensus, and almost four times greater than the MPC’s forecasts indicated in February. In 2025, the OBR see a blockbuster – and, frankly, unrealistic – 1.9% pace of GDP growth, well above the sell-side median of 1.2%, and the BoE’s meagre 0.75% forecast. This is important as any downward revisions to GDP expectations will likely further limit the Chancellor’s room to manoeuvre and deliver significant further fiscal easing later in the year, before a likely Q4 general election.

As noted above, the Budget measures seem highly unlikely to materially alter the BoE policy outlook. Reduced national insurance contributions aren’t seen as inflationary, while the restrained degree of fiscal easing will further allay concerns that inflation could make a significant resurgence later in the year.

Consequently, and in keeping with recent times – bar, obviously, the ‘mini-budget’ of September 2022 – Hunt’s statement to the Commons caused relatively little by way of significant market volatility.

The pound traded ‘as flat as a pancake’ through the Budget, with little for market participants to trade off given the largely unchanged macroeconomic outlook, with cable remaining contained within the 1.26 – 1.28 range that has been, by and large, in place since the middle of last December.

Preview

Gilts were similarly uninspired by Hunt’s measures, trading pretty much flat across all maturities, with any borrowing jitters also somewhat soothed by the year-ahead gilt remit being bang in line with market expectations at £265bln.

The same, unsurprisingly, can be said for UK equities. While the FTSE 100 did briefly probe new day highs as Hunt spoke, those modest gains fizzled as remarks continued, particularly as modest strength in the homebuilding, and hospitality, sectors faded as rapidly as it had come about.

此处提供的材料并未按照旨在促进投资研究独立性的法律要求准备,因此被视为市场沟通之用途。虽然在传播投资研究之前不受任何禁止交易的限制,但我们不会在将其提供给我们的客户之前寻求利用任何优势。

Pepperstone 并不表示此处提供的材料是准确、最新或完整的,因此不应依赖于此。该信息,无论是否来自第三方,都不应被视为推荐;或买卖要约;或征求购买或出售任何证券、金融产品或工具的要约;或参与任何特定的交易策略。它没有考虑读者的财务状况或投资目标。我们建议此内容的任何读者寻求自己的建议。未经 Pepperstone 批准,不得复制或重新分发此信息。