Team No Comments

Invesco Article – Brexit negotiations: it’s getting close to midnight

Please see below an article received from Invesco yesterday afternoon providing their views on the ongoing Brexit negotiations:

As you can see from the above, negotiations remain on a knifes edge, however, a deal would be more beneficial for both sides and as suggested above, it could be that a deal is agreed in the 11th hour.

If a deal was to be agreed, we would expect this to have a positive impact on markets and the opposite would also be true.

We will continue to provide details on any announcements made on a deal or no deal scenario and what impact this could have on markets and investments.

It is important to remember, whatever the outcome may be, it is important to remain invested and focus on your long-term objectives.

Please continue to check our Blog content for advice and planning issues and the latest investment, markets and economic updates from leading investment houses.

Please keep safe and healthy.

Carl Mitchell – Dip PFS

IFA and Paraplanner

03/12/2020

Team No Comments

Brewin Dolphin – Markets in a Minute

Please below the latest ‘Markets in a Minute’ update from Brewin Dolphin – received last night 01/12/2020

Markets in a minute: Equity rally pushes global markets to record highs

01 . 12 . 2020

It’s been an historic week for equity markets as numerous indices hit all-time highs. In the US, the Dow passed the 30,000 level for the first time and the Russell 2000 index of small cap firms also hit a new record. Japan’s Nikkei hit a 29-year high and the MSCI Global Index hit its highest level ever. Here in the UK, the FTSE100 enjoyed its best month since 1989, rising by 12.4%. The rally has been prompted by positive vaccine news and high hopes of a return to normal in 2021, plus Donald Trump finally appeared to accept his defeat.

Last week’s markets performance*

  • FTSE100: +0.25%
  • S&P500: +2.27%
  • Dow: +2.12%
  • Nasdaq: +2.95%
  • Dax: +0.46%
  • Hang Seng: +1.67%
  • Shanghai Composite: +0.90%
  • Nikkei: +4.37%

*Data for week to close of business on Friday 27 November.

Stocks fall as investors take some profits

Global markets were largely down at the start of the week, with US indices retreating from their highs. The Dow fell by 0.91% while the Nasdaq closed down just 0.06%.

Here in the UK, the FTSE100 fell by 1.59% with most of that fall occurring in the last hour of trading.

This is a classic sign of profit taking; when investors look at their portfolios at the end of the month and see big gains in equities and relatively lacklustre performance from other assets such as bonds and cash, it is typical for many investors to cash in some profits, leading to a downturn in prices. The next question is whether we will see a classic ‘Santa’s rally’, the phenomenon that sees shares rise in most years in the run-up to Christmas.

Black Friday sees online sales surge

Digital sales rose by almost 22% on Friday compared with last year, with Covid-19 leading shoppers to spend around $9bn online instead of going into physical stores. Another interesting aspect is that 40% of those sales were booked over smartphones, highlighting two secular trends that we think are here to stay, even as the pandemic fades over the next couple of years.

Property boom

UK mortgage approvals hit a record high in October, reaching their highest levels since 2007 as buyers rush to complete purchases before the government’s temporary stamp duty holiday ends next Spring. The news comes despite rising unemployment and falling economic activity.

There were 97,500 mortgages for home purchases approved in October, up by a third compared to February, before the pandemic started. Economists expect the mini boom to continue until the stamp-duty break ends in March, as new working habits prompt more people to trade up or move out of towns as they envisage working from home more often, even after the pandemic.

After that point, the consensus is for activity to begin reflecting the economic fundamentals, as rising unemployment and mortgage rates take their toll and the cautious attitude being exhibited by consumers on the high street spreads to the housing market.

Source: Bank of England
Data: 30/11/2015-31/10/2020

Households repay credit and loans

Data from the Bank of England showed signs of a slowdown in consumer spending, with households repaying a net £600m of consumer credit in October. That means consumers are repaying more in loans and credit cards than they are borrowing. In contrast, consumers were borrowing roughly £1bn a month before the pandemic.

This is important because consumer borrowing tends to form the basis for most economic recoveries. This time, however, a vaccine and return to the office may do the trick instead, helping bolster spending in suffering town centres.

Interest rates

There is an expectation that interest rates will stay close to zero for some time, but beyond the next few months, rates in the UK and US could begin to diverge.

For the immediate future the outlook looks like it should improve for the UK as it emerges from lockdown, while the US remains vulnerable to further tightening measures. The US economy has remained resilient so far, even according to high frequency data, but the latest initial jobless claims showed rising claims for the last two weeks, while consumer sentiment exhibited worries over the outlook for the employment, which may keep rates low in the US and help push the case for more monetary and fiscal stimulus.

This week’s ‘Markets in a Minute’ from Brewin Dolphin focuses on this week’s market rally which has been prompted by positive vaccine news and the hopes of a return to normality during 2021.

Please continue to check back for our regular blog posts and updates.

Charlotte Ennis

02/12/2020

Team No Comments

Daily Investment Bulletin

Please see below update received from Brooks Macdonald this morning. It explains where the markets stood by the end of November, as the world continues to wait for vital vaccine efficacy results in the fight against Covid-19.

What has happened

With yesterday’s close November capped off one of the best months of performance for global assets. The quid pro quo was weakness in safe havens such as the US dollar and gold, but sovereign bonds were remarkably resilient as monetary accommodation outweighed the changing vaccine winds.

OPEC+ delayed

The OPEC+ meeting that was planned for today has been pushed back to Thursday as members needed to have further discussions ahead of the summit. The main items on the agenda is whether or not to keep to a planned easing of supply cuts from the start of January. The oil price is walking a tightrope at the moment, with vaccine hopes for a faster recovery on one side, against continued COVID risks during the winter months on the other. As well as trying to judge the likely pace and scale of the nascent global economic recovery, OPEC+ members also have the challenge of keeping production discipline intact. Should OPEC+ members break ranks on production, this risks a lot more volatility for the oil price as well as uncertainty for the energy sensitive parts of the market.

COVID update

Whilst we didn’t, as expected, see any new vaccine efficacy results yesterday the incremental vaccine news continued. Moderna announced that it would request emergency authorisation from both the US and EU regulator and Novavax said that its UK study was expecting results soon. Meanwhile cases continue to fall in Europe with the UK seeeing its 7-day average move to early October levels and France seeing its lowest daily case rise since August. Of course, the UK partial lockdown is about to ease so there will be a knock-on impact on cases down the line, but this will all occur with a familiar lag. In the US we have seen cases continue to rise particularly in the original hot spot, New York, and the summer hot spot of California.

What does Brooks Macdonald think

Whilst November was an exceptionally strong month for equity returns the relative outperformance of cyclical equities over defensives was the main story. Selectivity remains key within the cyclical sectors as there are some areas, such as bricks and mortar retail, that have likely seen their decline accelerated by the pandemic. For others, such as airlines, it’s too early to say whether COVID-19 will cause a permanent reduction in business travel for example. This may prevent some sectors from rallying to their start of year levels for some time.

We will continue to publish relevant content and market updates as we enter the final month of a challenging year. Please check in again with us soon.

Stay safe.

Chloe

01/12/2020

Team No Comments

Brooks Macdonald Weekly Market Commentary

Please see the below market update from Brooks Macdonald:

  • US and Global markets hit all-time highs as vaccine euphoria continues
  • European COVID-19 cases fall as US numbers continue to mount
  • Brexit talks enter yet another key week as one month of transition period remains

US and Global markets hit all-time highs as vaccine euphoria continues

US and Global markets hit another all-time high on Friday as the vaccine tide lifted all ships. Signs of a smoother transition from the Trump Presidency to Biden also spurred a regional outperformance of the US over Europe despite the former having more of a growth skew within its mega caps.

European COVID-19 cases fall as US numbers continue to mount

This may be the first Monday in a month that does not have a vaccine efficacy trial linked to it. Over the weekend, there were several reports suggesting that the UK could be the first country to approve the Pfizer vaccine, while the US Surgeon General is expecting Pfizer to seek authorisation for emergency use on 10 December. This means the first round of vaccinations may occur in the UK and US ahead of Christmas. This may increase the palatability of shorter-term restrictions that are the source of a Conservative MP revolt in the UK currently. More generally, the weekend continued the narrative of slowing infections in Europe but cases that continue to grow in the US. The state level restrictions in the US are more piecemeal, meaning the response, as we saw over the summer surge, tends to be slower and less uniform.

Brexit talks enter yet another key week as one month of transition period remains

Another ‘key’ week for Brexit passed uneventfully though; with only four weeks left until the end of the year, the key one must surely be approaching. This week, face-to-face meetings continue and comments over the weekend suggest that a deal is getting closer. On the level playing field, UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said that he could see ‘a landing zone’, similar to words used by the EU a few weeks ago. This implies that the main issue is now fisheries, which remains a sticking point despite the small contribution that the industry provides to GDP. The UK Government is concerned that giving too much ground on fisheries will mean that the UK has not ‘taken back control’ of its borders. While the next UK election is a long way away, there is undoubtedly a political angle to the optics of any deal. With the three developed world vaccine front runners having reported their early stage efficacy, this week may be less dramatic in terms of stock rotations. The US jobs report on Friday may be a source of volatility, however. Initial Jobless Claims have risen for the last few weeks, so investors will be watching closely to see if this is sufficient to stop the improvement in headline employment numbers.

Please keep checking back for our regular blog updates.

Andrew Lloyd

01/12/2020

Team No Comments

Blackfinch Group Monday Market Update

Please see below for the latest Blackfinch Group Monday Market Update received by us today 30/11/2020:

UK COMMENTARY

  • Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced an end to the second national lockdown, with the country moving to a three-tier system after 2nd December. Additional rules governing the Christmas period were also announced, with three households allowed to form a ‘bubble’ between 23rd and 27th December.
  • The Composite UK Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) fell to a six-month low of 47.4 in November, from 52.1 in October, indicating a contraction in business activity. The services sector PMI contracted from 51.4 to 45.8, while there was expansion in manufacturing from 53.7 to 55.2.
  • Rishi Sunak announced the Government’s latest spending review. He confirmed that £55bn of COVID-related spending is in place for the next fiscal year, in addition to the £280bn allocated for 2020.
  • The Office for Budget Responsibility released its forecasts, showing its central case. This is where vaccines are widely available from mid-2021, leading to the economy being approximately 3% smaller in 2024/25 than if the pandemic hadn’t happened.

US COMMENTARY

  • The General Services Administration announced that it would begin the formal transition process to the president-elect Joe Biden. This will allow Biden and his team access to both funding and government agency officials. It’s the first sign that a smooth transition of power may take place.
  • Initial jobless claims came in ahead of expectations at a five-week high of 778,000
  • The Federal Reserve meeting minutes from early November showed that policymakers will consider further stimulus via asset purchase mechanisms

ASIA COMMENTARY

  • China’s industrial profits rose for the sixth consecutive month, posting an increase of 28.2% year on year according to the country’s National Bureau of Statistics

COVID-19 COMMENTARY

  • Results from clinical trials of the COVID-19 vaccine in joint development by Astrazeneca and Oxford University showed 70% effectiveness across all dosing regimens tested. One regimen showed efficacy of 90%.

These articles provide concise well-informed views that cover the whole of the market and are useful to maintain your up to date view of the markets globally.

Please keep reading our blogs regularly to give yourself a holistic and up to date view of the markets.

Keep safe and well.

Paul Green

30/11/2020

Team No Comments

J.P. Morgan – Investment Outlook for 2021

Please find below an article from J.P. Morgan which was received late on Friday and outlines their outlook for investments for 2021:

As you can from the above, the action taken from central banks has really helped economies get through these hard times.

There will be more of a focus on investing in investments/companies that have a positive effect on the environment, also known as, Environmental, Social and (Corporate) Governance (ESG) as the world attempts to work together to reduce the impact of global warming.

Overall, Diversification across geographies and assets classes will be important now more than ever, as investors seek real (post inflation) investment returns.

Please continue to check our Blog content for advice and planning issues and the latest investment, markets and economic updates from leading investment houses.

This is the first of our 2021 forecasts – expect more to follow.

Please keep safe and healthy.

Carl Mitchell – Dip PFS

IFA and Paraplanner

30/11/2020

Team No Comments

Five top tips for people accessing their pension during Covid-19

I’ve just cut and paste this from an article received from A J Bell yesterday, Sunday 29/11/2020.  It’s a little late into the pandemic but I agree with most of the content.

1. Can you use other income sources to tide you over?

If you take taxable income from your pension, your annual allowance will reduce from £40,000 to just £4,000 (the ‘money purchase annual allowance’ or MPAA). This is one of the main reasons why you might avoid taking taxable income from your retirement pot. If you have money saved in an ISA, for example, you could consider taking this out tax-free, while also keeping your full pensions allowance intact.

2. Take your tax-free cash first

Note that the MPAA only kicks in if you take taxable income from your pension pot. So if you have no other options open to you, taking only your tax-free cash will at least leave you more flexibility to rebuild your retirement fund later on.

3. Do you have a plan?

If you have been forced to access your pension early – or are planning to in the coming months – spend some time thinking about how you can rebuild your fund once your income bounces back. It might be that you need to pay more in as a result to get back on track, or consider working a bit longer. But whatever you do, don’t stick your head in the sand.

4. Sustainability is the key

For those who have already stopped working and are taking a retirement income via drawdown, it is vital to review withdrawals regularly to make sure they remain sustainable. These reviews should happen at least annually, and you should be prepared to potentially reduce your income if your investments suffer significant short-term falls (as we saw in March and April).

5. Consider a ‘natural income’ route

A ‘natural income’ retirement strategy involves living off the dividends your investments produce, thereby preserving the capital value of your underlying fund, allowing it more time to grow. While a natural income strategy has been particularly difficult in 2020 as swathes of companies have cut dividends, positive vaccine news could mean it is more viable in 2021 and beyond.

Summary

I struggle with the last point on a ‘natural income.’  If this were for your main source of income, you would have to be able to manage significant variation in income yields, particularly at the moment.  This would work for a secondary income, a top up income from, for example, a Stocks & Shares ISA portfolio.

From my point of view, I advise all clients to build at least three different assets to help manage risk and aid tax efficiency in retirement; cash deposits, Stocks & Shares ISA portfolios and pension funds.

If markets drop as they did in March and your pension fund values follow, you can then switch your Drawdown pension income off, start to draw on your cash deposits to cover living costs and wait for the market to recover.  This will help you protect your pension assets for the long term.  As the markets recover, you can start your Drawdown pension income, perhaps at a lower level initially.

When markets fully recover, you can use your Stocks & Shares ISAs to top up your cash deposits.  Your Stocks & Shares ISAs and pension funds remain invested and recover in value so that you are fully prepared for the next shock to markets – hopefully, a good long time away.

Any guaranteed income you have, for example State Pensions, will help through volatile periods.

Take care.

Steve Speed

30/11/2020

Team No Comments

Jupiter Asset Management – Active Minds

Please see article below from Jupiter Asset Management which provides their latest market views – received today 27/11/2020

Active Minds – 26 November 2020

James Moir – Analyst, UK Growth

The normalisation of UK politics has begun

James Moir, Equities Analyst, UK Growth, gave an update on how the UK market has reacted to news flow in November. The Covid crisis has had a particularly severe impact on the UK market, given the relatively high weighting to oil & gas, financials and miners. As such, it has rebounded more than most developed markets this month on the back of the positive vaccine developments.

Although the bounce back has been strong, James pointed out that sectors such as oil & gas and banks are still significantly down year-to-date. James gets the sense that there has been a bottoming out of assumptions for the energy stocks, while the absolute bear case for bank credit losses might be avoided now that vaccines are imminent.

In terms of style, it has undeniably been a good month for Value, but Growth stocks in the UK have nevertheless delivered absolute gains this month. In any case, the winners and losers from Covid haven’t neatly aligned with the Value/Growth divide, with James and the team identifying many companies they consider long-term Growth stocks that have been adversely impacted by Covid and have had a strong November.

Company news is fairly thin, given that this isn’t reporting season, but there have been a couple of M&A deals that are notable for being domestic-focused UK companies that are being acquired ahead of Brexit. 

Turning to Brexit, James sees it as significant that a normalisation of UK politics appears to be underway. In the past month, the UK government has announced a 10-point plan on the environment, and increased the defence budget by almost 10%. Leaving the detail of this spending aside, James said it is important that the UK government is now being more active on priorities beyond Brexit, with many issues long overdue for being addressed, and that should be encouraging to all investors in the UK market.

Ivan Kralj – Assistant Fund Manager, Absolute Return

Is this the start of a prolonged rotation back into Value?

Ivan Kralj, Assistant Fund Manager, Absolute Return, shared his thoughts on the ‘Growth to Value’ rotation narrative. Although some of the daily moves over the past few weeks have been extraordinary, in magnitude and in the context of any longer timeframe, those moves were mere blips, said Ivan. He continues to see huge gaps between share price and valuation, and massive spreads between companies that are perceived as being ‘fit for the future’ which are trading on triple-digit P/E ratios and price-sale ratios above 30x, and those that are viewed as ‘boring’, asset-heavy companies which are trading on historically low single-digit P/Es and offering around 10% dividend yields.

So, why is this happening? As Value investors are facing large redemptions and are forced to liquidate positions, prices are being driven down. Ivan noted a recent academic paper that found how surprisingly price inelastic the stock market is, and that flows in and out of the market are having a significant effect on price – this seems to confirm that it’s liquidity rather than fundamentals that is driving many of today’s moves, said Ivan. However, he thinks it’s wise to assume that valuations will one day matter once again. Market experience over the past decade doesn’t mean that anything has fundamentally changed, even though valuations have been poor predictors of share prices over that period. There’s a century’s worth of quantitative and behavioural evidence that suggests investors tend to under-price stocks with the poorest prospects and over-price those with the most promising prospects. 

While it’s too early to tell if a prolonged rotation back into Value stocks has begun, Ivan thinks Russell Napier’s recent essays provide the most compelling narrative in terms of potential catalysts. Napier argues we’re transitioning from a new era where governments are seizing the money creation mechanism from central banks, and they’re incentivising commercial banks to lend to businesses and consumers in the real economy, through various government-backed lending programmes. That should create money, potentially leading to inflation and nominal economic growth. In that scenario, said Ivan, if inflationary expectations were to change then Value stocks should do really well.

Patty Cao – Assistant Fund Manager, Emerging Markets Debt

Goldilocks scenario supports emerging market debt in 2021

The election of Joe Biden as US president has been positive for emerging markets (EM) in that it potentially reduces trade tensions and brings a more conciliatory foreign policy, and the vaccine news has also provided a boost, said Patty Cao, Assistant Fund Manager, Fixed Income.
Inflows have reached a three-month high in emerging market debt, and net flows have turned positive for the year. Last week saw inflows of $3.2 billion into the asset class, split evenly between local currency and hard currency, Patty said, citing JPMorgan data.

These trends should continue next year, in her view. The team is expecting a Goldilocks scenario (not too hot, not too cold) for EM, a year of repair and renewal. Economic growth should improve sharply, with China and India each forecast to expand by around 9%, and rebounds elsewhere as vaccines roll out and markets and economies come back to life.

There is a cyclical upswing in growth, and there is plenty of support from central banks across the globe, Patty said. This should keep the US dollar relatively weak and inflows into the asset class robust, which is supportive of asset prices.  In her view it makes sense to stay bullish on EM credit, and local currency and sovereign debt.

Colin Croft – Fund Manager, Emerging Markets

Low cost, simpler vaccines are great news for emerging markets

As you would expect, the positive news flow around vaccines has been positive for Emerging Market (EM) equities, said Colin Croft, Fund Manager, Emerging Markets. The data from the Oxford University vaccine has been especially impactful, he said, as the relatively low cost and simpler logistics (the vaccine is stable at normal fridge temperatures) compared to the earlier announced results should help wider distribution across emerging markets.

This moves us towards a recovery scenario which ought, over the next 6-12 months, to drive outperformance of the most beaten down and economically sensitive sectors such as airlines and banks, said Colin. Some of the banks in emerging markets have been relatively resilient anyway, he highlighted, without having to raise equity and making significant upfront provisions early in the pandemic. This means that several of them are already showing a rapid rebound in earnings as provisions come down. 
Colin also touched on the US election. As we inch towards a Biden presidency, Putin is one of only three major foreign leaders yet to congratulate him. There have been some worries that Russia might face the risk of more sanctions once Trump is gone, so last week Colin joined a call with a former US Ambassador, who is close to the Biden team and designed the current Russia sanctions regime back in 2014. His view was that Russia doesn’t face an immediate threat of new economic sanctions – while Biden was sceptical of Obama’s reset and is unlikely to try something similar, he is also unlikely to escalate sanctions without a fresh reason to do so. 

So, a Biden presidency might not be as bad as feared for Russian assets – but the caveat is that this will depend on what Russia does – if they do cross certain lines again, then there would be a greater likelihood of better-targeted US action, that is better coordinated with allies, than under Trump. So Colin’s view is that if something does happen he’d be more inclined to turn bearish on Russia, but for the time being Biden shouldn’t necessarily be seen as a negative for Russian equities. 

Please note: Market and exchange rate movements can cause the value of an investment to fall as well as rise, and you may get back less than originally invested. The views expressed are those of the individuals mentioned at the time of writing, are not necessarily those of Jupiter as a whole, and may be subject to change. This is particularly true during periods of rapidly changing market circumstances.

A good update from Jupiter Asset Management’s fund managers, providing a useful insight into the markets.

Please continue to check back for our latest blog posts and updates

Charlotte Ennis

27/11/2020

Team No Comments

ESG… the ‘new normal?’

Firstly, yes, this blog is called ‘the new normal’ and yes, I know you may be fed up of this phrase (believe me, I am too!), but dare I say it? Is ESG ‘the new normal’ when it comes to investing?

You may have seen some of our posts over this past year on ESG and sustainable investing.

We posted a 3 part series over the summer called ‘What is ESG? – An Introduction’, this was written by us to help our clients really understand what ESG is, and it’s a good thing we did… a recent study was undertaken in this industry and it was found that the majority of clients didn’t understand what ESG was, in fact it was found that people thought it stood for ‘ethically sourced goods’.

Google searches also show an increase of 216% in the term ‘ESG’ since 2018. This shows if people don’t know what it is, they want to learn.

Over the summer we wrote;

What does ESG stand for?

ESG stands for Environmental, Social and Governance

But what is it?

Investopedia definition for ESG is;

‘Environmental, social and governance (ESG) criteria are a set of standards for a company’s operations that socially conscious investors use to screen potential investments.’

ESG is more of a theme or a set of principles to follow rather than a single set principle.’

In case you missed it, please revisit this blog series using the following links: What is ESG? – An Introduction – Blog Series – Part 1, Part 2 and Part 3.

One Planet, One Society, One Economy

ESG is a set of principles throughout not just investing, but throughout the world.

Climate change is a factor within ESG principles, but why is it important to focus on climate change?

Well we are one planet. We are one society and one economy. Yes, I am aware that sounds very ‘tree hugger-ish’… but look at how issues caused by climate change can affect society and the economy.

You will have seen hurricanes, floods, the wildfires in California and Australia on the news over the past few years. These are all driven by global warming. Since 1980, the cost of weather related catastrophises has been over $4,200Billion.

Boris Johnson recently announced that the aim is for the UK to have no sales of new fossil fuel cars by 2030.

Climate change is not an abstract future concept anymore and ESG isn’t just the latest trend, it is a future state of being, it’s an input into the outcomes of the future and it’s about companies embracing opportunities and making changes now to invest in the future.

The concept of ‘ESG’ or ‘ethical’, ‘socially responsible’ isn’t new.

Over 30 years ago, in 1987, there was a study by the Brundtland Commission called ‘Our Common Future’ which said that;

‘Sustainable development meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs, guaranteeing the balance between economic growth, care for the environment and social well-being’

ESG has been gaining momentum for a while now as climate change and other social issues presented themselves but then of course, the pandemic hit.

Many investors probably assumed that the ESG focus would fade however it was only strengthened, with people looking at how everybody working from home would reduce carbon emissions, international travel was halted which again contributed to the drop in carbon emissions and early on in the pandemic when companies had to send employees off to work at home or on furlough and their mental and physical wellbeing became a focus.

Sustainable investments were once few and far between and usually meant sacrificing returns in order to stand by your beliefs, but these days, you would be hard pressed to find a company or an investment that doesn’t have some form of ESG policy or statement. Of course some may just be doing this to ‘tick the boxes’ but some will be actively involved in ‘doing the right thing’.

ESG has momentum now, we no longer think you have to sacrifice returns either!

As we have said before, ESG is not a tangible ‘thing’ that you can see or hold, it is in fact a complex interconnected system of ideas and processes.

Think of it as a journey, rather than a destination.

Andrew Lloyd

27/11/2020

Team No Comments

Sunak pledges increased spending on jobs, housing and infrastructure

Please see below commentary received from AJ Bell this morning which highlights key points for investors on the Chancellor’s spending review.

After postponing the Budget earlier this year, and with public sector borrowing at a peacetime high, Chancellor Rishi Sunak’s spending review was keenly awaited.

While the health emergency is not yet over, despite over £280 billion of spending on health and employment measures, ‘the economic emergency has just begun’ according to the Chancellor.

UK output is expected to shrink by 11% this year, the most in history, with next year forecast to see a rebound of 5.5%, and by 2025 the economy will be 3% smaller than estimated pre-pandemic.

Sunak promised another £18 billion to help the NHS fight the virus, along with £30 billion in extended furlough payments, restart programmes, local council grants and rail subsidies, to help firms in hospitality, staffing and travel.

Also, as part of a ‘once-in-a-generation’ £100 billion infrastructure plan, there is a big increase in spending on public services, building new schools and hospitals, hiring more nurses, recruiting more police officers and building more prisons, which will benefit the outsourcing sector.

Spending on roads and other transport schemes to ‘level up’ the regions is good news for infrastructure firms, while on top of Help to Buy, which is estimated to be worth £12 billion, there is a new £7 billion national housebuilding scheme and planning regulations will be eased, all of which will be music to the ears of the housebuilders.

The UK economy requires continuous support from Government in order to recover from the effects of the pandemic. Please check in again with us soon for further interesting and relevant content based on world-wide events.  

Stay safe.

Chloe

26/11/2020