I’ve been keeping busy as winter in London sets in. The Christmas lights are all out and looking resplendent, and both the West End and the City are feeling pretty buzzy. For all the general ‘UK stuck in the weeds’ economic commentary, we feel a long way from any talk of recession.
I’ve been away every weekend in October, partly in the UK and partly visiting friends overseas.
And now we’re in November, the clocks have gone back, but temperatures haven’t plummeted yet. London feels busy – pubs still have crowds outside.
Finally, the UK’s first Labour budget for 15 years
The big UK political/market news of the month was the new government’s mucn anticipated budget on 30th October. Monevator’s summary is excellent.
What Monevator doesn’t mention is how relentlessly gloomy the runup to the budget was. The government has been clear:
Taxes are going up, because despite electoral statements to the contrary, those naughty Tories left a ‘black hole’ which, despite numerous commenters pointing out before the election, the Labour highups hadn’t seen coming
but the key taxes (Income Tax, National Insurance, VAT, Corporation Tax) are not going up, and ‘working people’ (a phrase subject to amusing and relentless parsing in the pre budget runup) are not going to pay more tax
leaving those who are not ‘working people’ (implication – people with unearned income; they mean us, FIREees) and those with the ‘broadest shoulders’ to pay more tax. Capital gains tax was clearly going to rise, as well as potentially tightening of tax-free pension mechanisms. Non doms were a particular target, as are (those paying for) private schools. In a parallel government narrative universe, the government also was clear it is working to boost private sector investment and woo business – which somehow sounds different from ‘broad shoulders’ doesn’t it?
I’ve had quite a lot of culture to enjoy in February.
Aside from some travel for the Six Nations rugby, I’ve been to two shows – one in London’s Royal Opera House and one on the south coast.
Thanks to HMG for the subsidy
Both events were either full or practically full. Covid feels fully behind us now. But the prices have stayed with us.
A cultural lighthouse
I was struck by the demographic difference between these two nights out. I know, I know, the demographics of opera and concerts are not a fully reliable guage. But I was practically the youngest person in the audience at Poole’s Lighthouse concert hall, whereas I felt 2nd quartile old in London’s Royal Opera House. Is this a reflection of where the money sits – with retirees only in Dorset, and with well-heeled workers and tourists in London? A rhetorical question, for now.
Markets in February 2024
The USA stock market continued to be the main story in February.
Though if you were paying attention, the Japanese market has been setting new records too – the Nikkei 225 is up 20% Year to Date.
It wasn’t just Japan that’s booming, with Asia ex Japan up 4.5% in February itself. Over in Europe and Australia we had much less excitement; Europe ex UK was up 2.8%, Australia up only 1.2% and the misery-guts UK’s market rose only 0.5%.