One of the driving forces behind the growth is the adventurous spirit of millennials and Gen Z
A British austerity budget hit the pound and gilts on Thursday, with stocks suffering worldwide on the glum economic outlook and the prospect of painfully high interest rates to curb inflation.
Britain unveiled a painful budget with £55 billion of tax hikes and spending cuts despite confirming its economy was already in recession.
But the measures didn't reassure British markets, with the pound falling and government borrowing costs rising. Losses on London stocks deepened, before later easing. The pound was down around one percent to $1.1799 in afternoon trading. London's blue-chip FTSE 100 index was down 0.5 per cent.
Traders fear the budget will worsen Britain's cost-of-living crisis after inflation spiked to a 1981 peak of 11.1 percent, and the government confirmed that the British economy was already in a recession that could last two years.
CMC Markets analyst Michael Hewson said upheaval in markets in September over the profligate fiscal policies of the previous government had largely subsided, meaning a budget that makes Britain a worse place to do business was no longer necessary. "Today's budget should have walked the line between pushing inflation lower, without completely crushing demand in the economy with too many tax rises, and spending cuts," Hewson said in a note to investors. "Initial analysis of today's package suggests that we've got a lot of the former, and not too much of the latter, which is bad news if you're looking to get businesses to invest," he added.
Wall Street opened sharply lower as investors worried the US Federal Reserve will continue to aggressively raise interest rates to lower rampant inflation, even if it means pushing the economy in recession.
Investors have been reassured by some data suggesting inflationary pressures are diminishing, as well as the overall economy is holding up well, but statements by some Fed policymakers spooked traders.
"Concerns that the Fed will overtighten and force the U.S. economy into a hard landing were partly behind yesterday's selling and widening inversion of the yield curve," said Patrick O'Hare at Briefing.com
"Those concerns remain in place today and have been heightened by remarks made this morning by some voting" members of the Fed's monetary policymaking committee, he added.
The Fed's main interest rate is currently at 3.75 to 4.0 percent, but one Fed member said it may need to go as high as 7.0 percent. Another said a contraction in the economy may be needed.
Oil prices fell back on worries about Chinese demand.
"China remains a downside risk for oil in the near term, despite its recent relaxation of certain Covid curbs," said Craig Erlam at OANDA online trading platform.
"A surge in cases in major cities, mass testing, and restrictions will hit economic activity despite recent measures which will weigh on demand in the world's second-largest economy," he added.
One of the driving forces behind the growth is the adventurous spirit of millennials and Gen Z
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