A £6.4 billion question emerged on Friday: Is the UK government signalling a tougher stance on the City? While the call for a windfall tax on banks came from a thinktank, the market’s violent reaction suggests investors are worried it reflects a broader shift in the political mood, one that could be less friendly to the financial sector.
The IPPR report’s proposal to tax bank “windfalls” from quantitative easing was the immediate trigger for the market rout. The idea of reclaiming some of the £22 billion annual cost of the policy clearly resonated with fears that the government, facing a £40 billion deficit, might see the City as a resource to be tapped rather than a partner in growth.
The sell-off in shares of NatWest, Lloyds, and other lenders was a manifestation of this fear. Investors are constantly trying to read the political tea leaves, and the combination of a major budget shortfall and a populist tax proposal has created a narrative of a potential government pivot against the financial industry.
Analysts like Neil Wilson of Saxo Markets questioned how such a move would align with a “pro-growth agenda.” The concern is that a tougher stance, exemplified by a windfall tax, could undermine the government’s own economic strategy, creating a policy contradiction that could damage the UK’s reputation as a stable and predictable place to do business.
