Shares in betting and gaming firms drop on talk of Labour tax raid / Image Source: Adobe

Stock prices rose on Monday morning in London despite reports of new restrictions on the UK gambling sector and disappointing data from China, ahead of US consumer inflation expectations.

The FTSE 100 index opened up 5.62 points, or 0.1%, at 8,259.69. The FTSE 250 was up 8.14 points at 20,772.98, and the AIM All-Share was up 0.78 points, or 0.1%, at 734.63.

The Cboe UK 100 was down slightly at 826.77, the Cboe UK 250 was virtually unchanged at 18,239.42, and the Cboe Small Companies was flat at 16,853.25.

The UK budget will focus on boosting living standards, reviving the NHS and ‘rebuilding Britain’, Prime Minister Keir Starmer said as he signalled investment in schools, housing and transport.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves will deliver her first budget on October 30 following gloomy warnings about the tough decisions and tax rises needed to deal with the economic legacy left by the Tories.

But Starmer indicated that the focus of the financial statement will be on ‘making people better off’.

The prime minister said his three priorities were ‘driving up living standards – making sure people feel better off, making sure our NHS is back on its feet and fit for the future, and that we’re rebuilding the country, particularly what we’re doing on housing’.

In European equities on Monday, the CAC 40 in Paris was down 0.3%, while the DAX 40 in Frankfurt was up 0.3%.

The Social Democratic Party of German Chancellor Olaf Scholz plans to lower taxes for a majority of the population if re-elected in next year’s federal elections, according to a draft resolution to be adopted. In return, the top 1% of incomes are to be taxed more heavily.

‘This reform will give people more financial leeway and strengthen purchasing power. We are thereby stimulating the economy from the bottom up and from the middle of society,’ says the draft prepared for Sunday’s SPD executive committee meeting, seen by dpa.

The German economy - Europe’s largest - is struggling to cope with the fallout of the Ukraine war, trade tensions with China and high energy costs, while burdened by red tape and creaking infrastructure. Revised government predictions forecast a recession for 2024.

Meanwhile, the European Central Bank is expected to lower interest rates again this week as anxiety about inflation in the eurozone fades and concerns over sluggish growth mount.

Inflation fell to 1.8% across the 20 members of the euro area in September, the first time it has been below the ECB’s target of two percent since 2021. While the rate is expected to tick up again towards the end of the year, the sense that consumer prices are back under control has grown.

ECB policymakers will meet in Slovenia Thursday to decide whether to reduce rates further and up the tempo of cuts.

The pound was quoted at $1.3064 early on Monday in London, lower compared to $1.3074 at the equities close on Friday. The euro stood at $1.0927, up against $1.0924. Against the yen, the dollar was trading at JP¥149.32, up compared to JP¥149.13.

In London, Mulberry Group gained 12%, while Frasers inched up 0.1%.

Mulberry Group said the firm would consider its ‘position’ in light of a raised offer from Frasers Group, though majority owner Challice still has no interest in selling its shares.

This follows an improved offer from Frasers, which owns 37% of Mulberry Group, following Mulberry’s rejection of a previous approach last week.

On Friday after the London market close, Frasers revealed a revised bid of 150 pence per share, higher than the 130p offer made before. The initial offer was rejected by Mulberry with the support of 56.4% shareholder Challice, and Challice on Sunday said it doesn’t support the latest offer either.

The revised offer is the latest chapter in a tussle between retailer Frasers and the Bath-based fashion group, after struggling Mulberry launched an equity raise last week, of which Frasers said it wasn’t given enough notice.

AstraZeneca rose 1.1%.

Enhertu, which is developed by AstraZeneca and Daiichi Sankyo, received approval by the National Medical Products Administration in China as first HER2-directed therapy for patients with HER-2 mutant metastatic non-small cell lung cancer. It is the fourth approval in China for Enhertu across three different tumour types.

easyJet fell 0.4%.

The group named Jan De Raeymaeker as chief financial officer, with effect from January 20, 2025, replacing Kenton Jarvis who as previously announced will succeed Johan Lundgren as chief executive on January 1.

Jan De Raeymaeker is currently CFO of Lineas, a private rail freight operator in Europe, where he oversees the Finance, Legal and Purchasing teams. Prior to Lineas, he was CFO of Brussels Airlines.

Elsewhere, Entain dropped 13%, following a report that the Labour government is considering an up to £3 billion tax hit on the sector.

Late Friday, the Guardian reported that Treasury officials are understood to be weighing up proposals, put forward by two influential think tanks and backed by one of the party’s top five individual donors, to double some of the taxes levied on online casinos and bookmakers.

Measures could be included in this month‘s budget, the report said.

Shares in William Hill-owner, Evoke, tumbled 14%, while Flutter Entertainment lost 7.2%.

Guardian sources said the Treasury had yet to make a decision but appeared ‘receptive’ to tweaking the UK’s regime of betting and gaming duties to raise extra funds of between £900 million and £3 billion, despite opposition from industry lobbyists.

‘It’s definitely on the map,’ said a source familiar with Treasury thinking. ‘There’s no obvious pushback to it.’

In Asia on Monday, the Shanghai Composite in China was up 2.1%, while the Hang Seng index in Hong Kong was down 0.9%. The S&P/ASX 200 in Sydney closed up 0.5%.

The Japanese market is closed for Sports Day.

China’s consumer inflation rate slowed in September, official data showed, in a sign that demand remains fragile in the world’s number two economy.

The consumer price index, a key measure of inflation, rose 0.4% year-on-year in September, cooling from the 0.6% climb recorded in August, the National Bureau of Statistics said.

The figure came in below the 0.6% forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economists. August’s figure, the highest level since February, had raised hopes that consumer confidence may be picking up.

At the end of 2023, the country had sank into deflation for four months, with the sharpest contraction in consumer prices in 14 years in January.

Also on Monday, China said it would issue special bonds to help its sputtering economy, signalling a spending spree to bolster banks, shore up the property market and ease local government debt as part of one of its biggest support packages in years.

The plan is part of a series of actions undertaken by Beijing to draw a line under a years-long property sector crisis and chronically low consumption that has plagued the world’s second biggest economy.

China is also preparing to allow local governments to borrow more to fund the acquisition of unused land for development. Officials have been battling to reverse China’s slowdown and achieve a growth target of 5% this year – enviable for many Western countries but a far cry from the double-digit expansion that for years boosted the Asian nation.

In the US on Friday, Wall Street ended higher, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average up 1.0%, the S&P 500 up 0.6% and the Nasdaq Composite up 0.3%.

Democratic White House candidate Kamala Harris will release a medical report confirming her fitness to be president, her campaign said, in a bid to put pressure on rival Donald Trump to publish his own health records.

An adviser to 59-year-old Harris’s campaign said the report would conclude: ‘She possesses the physical and mental resiliency required to successfully execute the duties of the presidency.’

Brent oil was quoted at $77.66 a barrel early in London on Monday, lower from $78.67 late Friday.

Gold was quoted at $2,660.20 an ounce, up against $2,658.30.

Still to come on Monday’s economic calendar, there are several speeches, including from Deutsche Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel, and UK Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee member, Swati Dhingra. Later in the day, there are US consumer inflation expectations.

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Issue Date: 14 Oct 2024