Last week brought a welcome dose of clarity for the UK. Chancellor Rachel Reeves delivered her Autumn Budget to the House of Commons, increasing her fiscal buffer to £22 billion, while announcing £26 billion in tax rises.
Reeves’ Budget: Front-Loaded Spending, Back-Loaded Taxes
As I alluded to in previous posts last week, the problem with the Budget is that the tax increases are back-loaded to the end of their Parliament (2029/30) – convenient. Unless I have missed something, I do not understand how this Budget helps break the UK’s fiscal issues. We not only have back-loaded tax rises but also front-loaded spending, which will naturally increase government borrowing in the short term.
Markets reacted as you would expect. The GBP caught a bid, GILTs rallied, and yields took a dive. Let’s be frank, credibility remains a key theme. I think this Budget was more to do with keeping the Bond market on the government’s side, and the market reaction was more about relief than anything that radiated credibility. This, of course, was not helped by the OBR, which noted that GDP is expected to grow by 1.5% this year (from its previously forecast 1.0%), but downgraded its estimate for subsequent years until 2029.
In terms of where this leaves the BoE, the Budget has done little to change the central bank’s trajectory, in my view. In fact, markets now all but fully price in a 25-bp rate cut on 18 December. I believe this was helped by the Budget’s decision to reduce energy levies, which may ease inflationary pressures.
If you cast your mind back to the BoE rate announcement on 7 November, the MPC voted 5-4 in favour of holding the bank rate at 4.00%, with BoE Governor Andrew Bailey clearly leaning more towards the side of doves.
Regarding what I am watching on the GBP, short positioning is being unwound. However, in the medium term, I expect downside in front-end yields to weigh on demand for the pound, with traders continuing to buy dips in the EUR/GBP cross.
RBNZ Signals End to Easing Cycle with Hawkish Cut
Additionally, the RBNZ update was also an interesting event last week. As expected, the central bank delivered a 25-bp rate cut, bringing the OCR to 2.25% from 2.50%. Nevertheless, this was viewed as a hawkish cut, with the RBNZ essentially calling time on its easing cycle.
According to the accompanying rate statement’s minutes, the central bank’s decision was centred on whether to hold off or cut by 25 bps, not a decision about whether to cut between 25 or 50 bps as market pricing suggested before the announcement.