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Stock markets and sterling take UK Budget statement in their stride | |
(about 3 hours later) | |
London's FTSE 100 inched marginally higher while the pound continued to trade close to a seven-week low against the dollar on Wednesday, showing only a muted reaction to Chancellor Philip Hammond’s Budget statement, in which he raised economic forecasts but warned that there was “no room for complacency”. | |
The UK’s benchmark stock index was approximately 0.1 per cent higher immediately after the statement, while the pound was around 0.2 per cent weaker at $1.2164, having already been close to a seven-week low earlier in the day. | |
The FTSE retreated from its gains closing 0.6 per cent lower, while the pound was still trading below $1.22 at market closing time. | |
Mr Hammond told MPs that Britain’s economy would grow faster than previously expected in the next financial year – by 2 per cent, up from 1.4 per cent. But he also said the independent Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) now expects lower growth in 2018-19 (1.6 per cent), in 2019-20 (1.7 per cent) and in 2020-21 (1.9 per cent). | |
Those forecasts appeared not to faze stock and currency investors though. | Those forecasts appeared not to faze stock and currency investors though. |
Neil Wilson, an analyst at ETX Capital, called the Budget statement “drab” and said that markets were “taking it in their stride”. | |
“This was a udget pretty low on content as far as investors are concerned,” he said, describing it as “a dry run for the new autumn set piece when [Mr Hammond] will know a lot more about what the Brexit landscape looks like”. | |
Ahead of the Budget, economists and strategists had already predicted that the statement was unlikely to have a major impact on markets due to being “fiscally neutral”. | |
UK markets have endured a turbulent ride since last June's Brexit vote and although the pound has stabilised somewhat from a massive slump at the end of 2016, it remains volatile with some economists forecasting that it could still slip further once Brexit negotiations commence. | UK markets have endured a turbulent ride since last June's Brexit vote and although the pound has stabilised somewhat from a massive slump at the end of 2016, it remains volatile with some economists forecasting that it could still slip further once Brexit negotiations commence. |
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