UK markets lost over $500 billion since Liz Truss took over as PM

 

Bloomberg

The UK’s stock and bond markets have lost at least $500 billion in combined value since Liz Truss took over as Prime Minister, with investor confidence shattered by a shock tax-cutting budget.
Taking the helm at a time when the UK economy was already grappling with the specter of recession, the Truss government’s new fiscal policies fuelled concerns that inflation and borrowing would surge at a time of rapidly rising interest rates. That triggered a cross-asset selloff so severe that it sent the pound to a record low and sparked chatter about emergency action by the Bank of England.
“Confidence in the UK has been sideswiped amid a pile-on of worries about the economic outlook and the direction of travel being taken by the Truss administration,” said Susannah Streeter, senior analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown. “Only a U-turn in the slash-and-spend policies is likely to significantly restore optimism, but the administration is digging in its heels.”
The FTSE 350 Index — which comprises stocks in the export-heavy FTSE 100 and the domestically focused FTSE 250 — has now lost more than $300 billion in market capitalisation since September 5, when Truss was confirmed leader of the Conservative Party. In that time, a UK government bond index has lost over £160 billion ($173 billion) in market value, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The rate on 10-year government bonds has risen by over one percentage point to surpass 4% for the first time since 2010.
Sterling-denominated, investment-grade bonds have lost $29 billion over the same time, dragging down the market value of a Bloomberg index that tracks the securities to the lowest level since March 2016. A gauge of sterling-denominated junk bonds — of which British companies account for more than 90% — has seen its market value drop by $1.4 billion.
To be sure, with bond holders more likely to buy and hold until maturity, the selloff in bonds is relatively smaller when compared to other assets. For stocks, the measures put at risk the FTSE 100’s outperformance this year, which has been reinforced by its exporter-heavy members. The index is down about 5% so far in 2022, compared with about a 20% slump in the Stoxx 600 Index in local currency terms, but its lead has narrowed in September.
“Far from being the safe pair of hands investors have been used to, the UK seems more like the wild west at the moment,” said Danni Hewson, a financial analyst at AJ Bell.
Meanwhile, the worst bond selloff in decades is seeing few signs of ending, with UK notes losing a stunning 27% this year, as central banks battle to stamp out the strongest inflationary pressures in decades.
The index, which tracks sterling-denominated sovereign and corporate debt, has fallen for the last seven days, including a 3.2% plunge on Monday which took it to the lowest level since 2014.
The slump came after UK Prime Minister Liz Truss’s new government rolled out plans for large-scale tax cuts in the face of an economic slowdown. That caused a slump in the pound and a record stampede out of UK government bonds, with investors anticipating it will add to the government’s already sizable budget deficit.

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