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The great British gilt tilt

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The UK Budget, Rachel Reeves’ first as Chancellor, will take place on 30 October. Reeves is expected to raise taxes in some form, and also to change the definition of public debt used for the UK’s fiscal rules to allow for more borrowing.

One simple observation is that if you’re going to do a tax-raising Budget, having it take place the day before Hallowe’en isn’t a great idea from an optics perspective.

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MainFT has lent into spooky season, serving the Chancellor such delights as:

The UK’s long-term borrowing costs have climbed sharply, fuelled by investor concerns about the Labour government’s Budget, pushing the gap with Germany to the widest in more than a year.

With three weeks to go to Rachel Reeves’ first Budget, bondholders say the UK chancellor will have to walk a “tightrope” if she is to proceed with her borrowing and investment plans without triggering a gilt sell-off.

There’s some decent evidence that gilts aren’t what they used to be, and have properly abandoned the comfortable spot where they used to sit between bunds and treasuries, to offer US-style yields:

Counterfactuals — such as where yields would be without the massive repricing that occurred in late 2022 — are worth considering, but also are not.

The recent shift, is, perhaps, more remarkable. Is it because of budgetary concerns? And, moreover, is it worth worrying about?

No, says Pantheon Macroeconomics’s Elliott Jordan-Doak:

We rather think surging interest rates in the past two weeks have been driven primarily by stronger-than-expected US data and oil prices rising as a result of the intensifying conflict in the Middle East. The prospect of more gilt issuance than expected has likely added to the rise in gilts yields, but only modestly. The previous government was already gaming the fiscal rules and leaving government debt on an unsustainable trajectory (see here), which failed to cause a market reaction. We doubt tweaking the fiscal rules to allow more—potentially productive—investment would cause markets to reappraise sovereign risk premia much

No, says Panmure Gordon’s Simon French:

A clear aversion to UK assets triggered a 6% drawdown in Sterling in 2022. Since the 2024 General Election the Sterling Index is up by almost 1%. This is one of the major countervailing datapoints to the idea that appetite for UK sovereign assets is facing a similar waning moment…

Gilt yields of course do not move in an international vacuum. Nor are they solely a function of domestic fiscal policy – either perceived or realised. There have been plenty of geopolitical crosswinds to contextualise this move in Gilt yields, including UK economic data that has remained remarkably robust in recent months.

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No, says Peel Hunt’s Kallum Pickering:

The uptick in UK 10-year gilt yields of c.50bp since mid-September seems to have sparked concern among some commentators that bond markets may be growing apprehensive about overborrowing by Chancellor Rachel Reeves in the upcoming 30 October Budget. It follows her hints that she may increase debt to finance a needed step-up in public investment. Upon closer examination, however, such concerns look exaggerated. For now, the rise in yields can more plausibly be attributed to a host of other mostly global factors.

Over the same period, Brent crude oil prices have risen by around 8% while natural gas prices are up by some 10%. Reacting to the prospect of a modest energy-related inflation uptick, 10-year bond yields have risen across all G7 economies: in the US by c.50bp, in Canada by c.40bp, in France by c.20bp, in Germany by c.15bp, in Japan by c.15bp, and in Italy by c.10bp.

The rise in UK yields is in line with the US uptick but notably higher than in other major Eurozone economies. Is the spread widening versus Europe a concern? Not really, since it has occurred alongside directionally-consistent shifts in consensus expectations. Over the past month, Bloomberg consensus growth forecasts for the UK have been revised up from 1.3% YoY to 1.4% for 2024 while projections for the US have increased from 2.5% to 2.6% for 2024 and from 1.7% to 1.8% for 2025. Consensus expectations for the Eurozone in 2026, meanwhile, have been cut from 1.5% to 1.4% – with 0.1pp downgrades for both 2024 and 2025 for Germany.

No, says TS Lombard’s Dario Perkins:

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Is there a moron risk premium in UK bonds? Trussonomics inspired a specific market reaction – yields surged & the currency simultaneously plunged. The (seminal) MRP captured this (EM-style) correlation between the two asset classes, which turned decisively positive in the autumn of ‘22. But that behaviour didn’t last, and although the relationship between sterling and gilts hasn’t gone back to the persistent negative correlation of the 2010s, we are not seeing those nastier moron dynamic today…

The explanation for relatively higher yields in the UK is simpler – it is about PERCEIVED inflation stickiness, and a BoE that is forced to cut interest rates slower than most of its peers. These charts show that it is not just 10-year yields that are stubbornly high, it is also 2-year yields. And 2-year yields are a better reflection of monetary policy, not “fiscal risk”. Whatever MRP existed during Trussonomics, was gone by mid-2023. 

Ish, says Capital Economics’s Joe Maher:

We think there is limited evidence of fiscal doubts creeping into the market. For one, much of the recent fall in the pound against the dollar from $1.34 to $1.30 can be explained by changes in relative short-term interest rate expectations. (See Chart 2.) If the markets were truly concerned about the government’s fiscal credibility, we would likely see both a rise in UK relative rate expectations and a fall in the pound, which occurred during the infamous Trussonomics debacle. Instead, the larger rise in yields in the UK than elsewhere can be explained by investors expecting the Budget to result in stronger near-term demand and higher interest rates.

Meh, says Goldman Sachs:

Our estimates in the UK show an increase in term premium driving the move higher in Gilt yields, leading to cross-market underperformance that we think will fade on the far-side of the budget. We still expect the 10y to underperform on the Gilt curve.

So, with much of the sellside sounding bullish, that’s all settled. We’ll see you on Hallowe’en for the meltdown.

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Goldman Sachs profits jump 45% to $3bn after trading boost

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Column chart of Equities revenues in $bn showing Goldman's stock trading business has best quarter since early 2021

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Goldman Sachs’ quarterly profits jumped 45 per cent to $3bn in the third quarter, boosted by its equity trading business, even as the investment bank took another hit from its retreat from retail banking.

Goldman’s net income compared with $2.1bn in the third quarter of last year and outstripped analysts’ estimates of about $2.5bn.

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In the best quarter for Goldman’s stock trading business since the start of 2021, equity trading revenues reached $3.5bn, up 18 per cent and defying expectations they would be roughly flat compared with a year earlier. Fixed income trading revenues fell 12 per cent to $3bn.

Overall trading revenues were up about 2 per cent from a year earlier despite a warning by chief executive David Solomon last month that trading revenues were likely to drop by close to 10 per cent, largely due to sluggish activity in fixed income.

Goldman’s stock was up more than 2 per cent in pre-market trading on Tuesday.

Column chart of Equities revenues in $bn showing Goldman's stock trading business has best quarter since early 2021

The year-on-year increase in net profits was also flattered by losses Goldman took a year ago tied to its pullback from consumer banking and writedowns on real estate investments.

In the latest quarter, Goldman took a roughly $415mn pre-tax hit from moving its credit card partnership with General Motors to Barclays, the cost of exiting from small business loans and further writedowns on the GreenSky business that it sold last year.

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Goldman benefited from a continuing revival of dealmaking activity in what Wall Street hopes is the start of a sustained recovery.

Fees were up 20 per cent at $1.9bn, slightly ahead of estimates. JPMorgan Chase last week reported a 31 per cent increase in investment banking fees to $2.3bn.

Goldman’s asset and wealth management division, which is central to Solomon’s efforts to make the bank less reliant on investment banking and trading, reported a 16 per cent increase in revenues to about $3.8bn.

Longtime Goldman rival Morgan Stanley will report its results on Wednesday.

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Workspace’s occupancy drops after ‘unusually high number’ of customers vacate

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Workspace’s occupancy drops after ‘unusually high number’ of customers vacate

“Many of the larger units will be subdivided into smaller units, where we see stronger demand and achieve higher pricing,” said Workspace CEO.

The post Workspace’s occupancy drops after ‘unusually high number’ of customers vacate appeared first on Property Week.

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Stansted airport outlines £1.1 billion investment plan over five years

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Stansted airport outlines £1.1 billion investment plan over five years

Stansted has released further details about its terminal extension, which will allow it to serve up to 43 million passengers a year.

Continue reading Stansted airport outlines £1.1 billion investment plan over five years at Business Traveller.

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Global public debt to pass $100tn this year, says IMF

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Global public debt is forecast to exceed $100tn by the end of this year, according to the IMF, which has warned that major economies’ plans to stabilise borrowing “fall far short of what is needed”.

The fund said on Tuesday that government debt, which ballooned during the Covid-19 pandemic, had continued to rise as countries embrace higher spending to stimulate economic growth. Debt was set to approach 100 per cent of global GDP by the end of the decade, it added.

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“Risks to the debt outlook are heavily tilted to the upside” and there are “good reasons to believe that future debt levels could be higher than currently projected”, it said in a report.

Debt was forecast to continue rising in countries including the US, the UK, Brazil, France, Italy and South Africa, the IMF said.

It added that government spending to fund the transition to greener energy, ageing populations and security concerns was likely to add to fiscal pressures over the coming years.

With inflationary pressures receding and the US Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank lowering borrowing costs, “now is an opportune time” for economies to start rebuilding fiscal buffers, the IMF said.

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It added that “in countries where debt is projected to increase further . . . delaying action will make the required adjustment even larger”. It called for “cumulative fiscal adjustment” — tax rises or spending cuts — of 3 per cent to 4.5 per cent of GDP to bring down debt across the world.

“Advanced economies should reprioritise expenditures, advance entitlement reforms, increase revenues through indirect taxes where taxation is low and remove inefficient tax incentives,” it said.

The IMF’s report comes as China tries to rejuvenate its economy with a huge fiscal stimulus and just weeks before the US presidential election.

The economic plans of both Donald Trump and Kamala Harris are forecast to swell US federal debt by trillions of dollars, according to a recent report by the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

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Concerns about rising levels of borrowing have contributed to a sell-off in government bond markets in recent weeks, including in the UK and France.

UK chancellor Rachel Reeves is expected by some economists to use her Budget this month to tweak the definition of public debt used for the UK’s fiscal rules to allow for more borrowing.

The ECB said in a report this year that long-term challenges were “likely to exert pressure on public finances” in the euro area.

Hitting a government debt-to-GDP ratio of 60 per cent by 2070, from today’s debt levels, would require governments to “immediately and permanently” increase their primary balance — the fiscal balance excluding net interest payments on public debt — by 2 per cent of GDP on average, the ECB said.

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Over half of homeowners want to ‘improve not move’, finds poll – see top 10 reasons why

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Over half of homeowners want to ‘improve not move’, finds poll - see top 10 reasons why

More than half of homeowners want to ‘improve not move’ – spending big on their current home instead of buying a new one.

A poll of 2,000 adults who own a property, found 41 per cent ‘love’ their home, leaving 53 per cent wanting to adapt it to suit their changing needs.

More than half of homeowners want to ‘improve not move’ – spending big on their current home instead of buying a new one. Release date – October 15, 2024. A poll of 2,000 adults who own a property, found 41 per cent ‘love’ their home leaving 53 per cent wanting to adapt it to suit […]

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More than half of homeowners want to ‘improve not move’ – spending big on their current home instead of buying a new one. Release date – October 15, 2024. A poll of 2,000 adults who own a property, found 41 per cent ‘love’ their home leaving 53 per cent wanting to adapt it to suit […]Credit: SWNS

And one in six (17 per cent) would be willing to spend more than £20,000 on renovations.

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Just 24 per cent would rather move elsewhere and start afresh but 46 per cent admit they will probably look to ‘list’ it within the decade.

The top reason driving people to move was the fact it may not meet their mobility needs as they get older.

While changes in lifestyle and a bigger property were other factors in considering listing it over loving it and making adjustments.

Sam Stannah, CEO of Uplifts, a home lift manufacturer, which commissioned the research, said: “Clearly, many people love the homes they live in – but there’s an acceptance that life can change in a heartbeat.

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“We all cherish our homes, the research confirms this – however, what’s truly eye-opening is the level of anxiety that arises when we consider if the home we love today will continue to meet our needs in the future.

“The findings have shown homeowners are very much aware they might have to make a decision to move home or renovate to meet their changing mobility needs.

“But also, there are plenty of owners on the ladder who don’t feel their current property quite matches what they want in terms of space and location, currently.”

The research found the average homeowner has lived at their property for an average of 15 years.

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Van lifer reveals why they decided not to go back to renting

With the comfort and familiarity, location and suitable size and layout the top reasons for 53 per cent considering their current place their ideal homestead. 

While the local community, feeling of security and facilities and amenities nearby among the others.

It also emerged 61 per cent believe their current home was big enough to accommodate any changes should their health requirements change.

And 41 per cent considered such needs when purchasing their property.

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According to Checkatrade, the average cost of a house extension can be anywhere between £30,000 to £42,000, more than double the average amount respondents are willing to pay to meet changing needs – £14,000.

Aside from the stress of moving, mortgage lender Halifax estimates the cost of moving house, from stamp duty to conveyancing can cost £12,000.

Ultimately, deteriorating health and downsizing were the top reasons respondents would feel they’d consider selling – if push came to shove.

HOMEOWNERS’ TOP 10 REASONS THEY CONSIDER THEIR PROPERTY THEIR ‘FOREVER HOME’

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1.            Comfort and familiarity

2.            Ideal location

3.            Suitable layout and size

4.            Community and neighbours

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5.            Safety and security

6.            Adequate facilities and amenities

7.            Memories and history

8.            Emotional attachment

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9.            Privacy

10.         Low maintenance

But those that are keen to make a move said the area they currently live in, having too many things to fix and their current rooms not being big enough were top motivations to list it.

The research, carried out via OnePoll, found 15 per cent of those polled have mobility issues – with climbing the stairs, stepping out of bed and reaching high shelves the top difficulties faced.

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Yet only nine per cent of all adults considered a home lift installation a realistic prospect to help with mobility from floor-to-floor.

Sam Stannah, from Uplifts, added: “The research indicates many people believe installation of products to improve their home may feel out of reach.

“And as a result, the heartbreaking decision of having to leave a beloved forever home can become a reality for many.

“However, installing a home lift can be done without disrupting the layout of a home or requiring invasive or costly work.”

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Is Tesla losing the robotaxi race?

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Line chart of Share price, $ showing Disappointed

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This article is an on-site version of our Unhedged newsletter. Premium subscribers can sign up here to get the newsletter delivered every weekday. Standard subscribers can upgrade to Premium here, or explore all FT newsletters

Good morning. AI has played a big role in the research that won the Nobel Prizes for chemistry and physics, and yesterday it was announced that frequent AI commentator Daron Acemoglu won the Nobel Prize for economics. Is this more evidence of an AI halo? Or proof that AI is the real deal? Email me: aiden.reiter@ft.com.

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Robotaxis

Last Thursday, Tesla hosted a glitzy showcase of its future offerings. Investors and the press were served drinks by Tesla’s humanoid Optimus robots, while Elon Musk gave the world its first official look at the “Cybercab” and “Robovan”: driverless, pedal-less autonomous vehicles designed for Tesla’s “robotaxi” fleet, which will allow riders to hail self-driving cars.

The market was . . . disappointed. Tesla stocks fell 8.8 per cent on Friday, and only partially recovered yesterday:

Line chart of Share price, $ showing Disappointed

The reasons for disappointment varied (and were well documented by our colleagues in Alphaville). Little detail was provided about its cheaper Model 2, which investors had hoped might lift near-term earnings. Some felt the joyrides in the new vehicles were less than thrilling. And, as it turns out, the self-functioning robots were not so self-functioning

Others were let down by the robotaxi offering itself. A lot of Tesla’s previous reports and press conferences have focused on Tesla’s full self-driving (FSD) software and the rollout of its robotaxi fleet, particularly the latter’s potential to obviate public transportation and unseat ride-sharing services such as Uber and Lyft — both of which saw their stocks surge as Tesla’s fell on Friday. As noted by our Lex colleagues, estimates for the expected value of the robotaxi market can range, but are very, very high: ARK Investments and Musk put it between $5tn and $8tn, while the more conservative RBC Capital Markets estimates it to be $1.7tn by 2040. In our piece from July, in which we tried to break down Wall Street’s earnings expectations for Tesla, we attributed $32bn of revenues to FSD software sales and robotaxis by 2029.

Tesla is not the only company trying to capture that market, though. It is up against Waymo, the autonomous driving company spun out of Google; Cruise, General Motors’ autonomous ride-hailing service; and Zoox, Amazon’s self-driving subsidiary. Is it possible that Friday’s market reaction was proof of investors feeling that Tesla may be losing the race? Some things that stuck out from Thursday’s presentation and investors’ and analysts’ reactions:

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  • Timeline: Musk initially promised a robotaxi fleet as early as 2018. During Thursday’s event he wavered: “We expect to be in production for the Cybercab, which is highly optimised for autonomous transport, in . . . well, I tend to be optimistic about timeframes, but in 2026 . . . before 2027, let me put it that way.”

    He committed to having some of the FSD capabilities for newer models available by next year in Texas and California, meaning that car owners or Tesla itself could potentially use FSD for taxi services. But it seems like Tesla’s official fleet of Cybercabs will not be up and running for a couple of years. Meanwhile, Waymo is already operating taxi fleets in four cities; one analyst told us they are “essentially ubiquitous in San Francisco”. It is also licensing its technologies to other companies and manufacturers. Cruise is operational in two cities, though it has hit some compliance and safety snares, and Zoox is testing its fleet in two states.

  • Compliance: One of the issues Cruise has run into is its proposal for a car without a steering wheel or pedals. Though the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration allows vehicles without either, Cruise paused production of its own offering after failing to get permission to scale production past 2,500 pedal-less vehicles per year. In a note to investors, TD Cowen states that Tesla’s ability to produce its own pedal-less, wheel-less Cybercabs could be “limited” given NHTSA’s previous production cap.

    The same TD Cowen note also states that Tesla’s technological approach might not meet safety standards. While Waymo and Cruise use Lidar, a remote sensing technology, Tesla prefers to use cameras and machine learning, arguing it is the superior and more cost effective technology. TD Cowen sees Tesla’s refusal to adopt Lidar as “a potential regulatory hurdle longer term” and one that will certainly raise the cost of the vehicle if the NHTSA requires Tesla to adopt Lidar.

  • Cost: On Thursday, Musk said the Cybercab would cost about $30,000, approximately the same price as its cheaper Model 3 and Model Y. But he also said that it would not have a charging port, instead using inductive charging — which Tesla does not currently have infrastructure for, raising the cost of the rollout. He also said that running the Cybercab would cost $0.20 per mile and will charge about $0.40 a mile. But the current average cost of owning and operating a vehicle in the US is $0.81 per mile, and $0.40 seems very low. Musk’s cars would have to show significant cost reductions, or Tesla may have to raise the price closer in line with existing ride hailing services.

Unhedged does not pretend to know whether Tesla will win the race for autonomous fleets. As SpaceX’s booster-catching feat showed, Musk’s companies often achieve things that were once thought to be impossible. And while it seem to us that these are pretty steep hurdles and evidence that Tesla may be falling behind, some analysts we spoke with actually saw these as strengths. For instance, Edison Yu of Deutsche Bank told us that although Tesla might need to raise the price of the Cybercab and add Lidar in the short term, its camera-based technology was a long-term edge:

Waymo has taken a very long time to scale because, though it has some AI capabilities, it has to map entire cities and code for driving cases. That is hard, as opposed to running the data through a black box model like Tesla does. This will all come down to who can scale faster. Scaling software [such as Tesla’s] is the more efficient and lucrative approach.

Tesla already has a lot of training data from its semi-autonomous driving function. Once FSD is up and running and Cybercabs are under production, it may prove to be the safer offering and quickly capture market share.

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Wall Street’s consensus estimate for Tesla’s 2029 revenue has fallen $10bn since we wrote our piece in July. Though we will not get new estimates based on Thursday’s event for a while, some investors think there will not really be an effect, as they already did not assume that Tesla would deploy its fleet in the next few years. Tom Narayan at RBC Capital Markets said, “2030 is not the bogey when we are dealing with robotaxi. It was disappointing to not get concrete numbers [on Thursday], but I don’t have Optimus or Robotaxi [generating revenue] in my forecasts for a couple of years anyway.”

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Should we just give up?

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