Just in: BT is selling its telecommunications Tower in the centre of London to MCR Hotels, for £275m.
MCR Hotels plan to turn BT Tower into a hotel, which means it will remain as a London landmark for the future, the telecoms group says.
Brent Mathews, property director at BT Group says:
“The BT Tower sits at the heart of London and we’ve been immensely proud to be the owners of this important landmark since 1984. It’s played a vital role in carrying the nation’s calls, messages and TV signals, but increasingly we’re delivering content and communication via other means.
This deal with MCR will enable BT Tower to take on a new purpose, preserving this iconic building for decades to come.”
The Tower, located in Fitzrovia, was built in 1964 by the General Post Office (GPO), and used to spread telecommunications traffic from London to the rest of the country.
But its role in communications has diminished as fixed and mobile technology changes, and its microwave aerials were removed more than a decade ago as they were no longer needed to connect London to the rest of the country.
As well as containing communications equipment and office space, it also contains a viewing galleries and a rotating restaurant on the 34th floor.
The restaurant has gone, but that floor does still spin, and gives some brilliant views over central London. It’s used for hosting corporate and charity events these days (public access ended in 1971 after a bomb blast).
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Just in: Banknotes featuring a portrait of King Charles III will be issued from 5 June, the Bank of England has announced.
The portrait of the monarch will appear on existing designs of all four banknotes (£5, £10, £20 and £50), with no other changes to the existing designs.
The new banknotes will only be printed to replace those that are worn, and to meet any overall increase in demand for banknotes, the Bank says.
And there’s certainly no need to throw existing notes away! Polymer banknotes that feature the portrait of Queen Elizabeth II will remain legal tender, and will co-circulate alongside the King notes.
But businesses that use machines that accept, sort or check banknotes will need to adapt them so they accept these new designs (there are details of what to do here).
The Bank says:
Machines requiring updates include those receiving notes, such as transport ticketing machines, self-service checkouts, gaming machines, vending machines, back-office machines and any other machines that are used to check banknotes are genuine.
Jeremy Hunt won’t be celebrating yet, says Ellie Henderson of Investec, despite the UK racking up a record surplus last month (see opening post).
Henderson says the £16.7bn January surplus is ‘slightly disappointing’,
Although the healthy January figure will no doubt be an accolade that the Conservative party will publicly celebrate, in regard to the readthrough to the fiscal headroom available for the upcoming 6 March Budget, today’s data was slightly disappointing.
The OBR had expected an even larger surplus of £18.2bn at the time of the Autumn Statement, meaning the numbers eat into some of the extra headroom gained in the interim relative to the OBR forecasts, when all else is equal (a rather big caveat!). However, thanks to more favourable numbers in the past, on the financial-year-to-January, borrowing is still tracking lower than the OBR had expected (£96.6bn vs OBR’s £105.8bn).
Henderson also points to rumours that Hunt could make a 1p cut to the basic rate of income tax (which could cost £7.2bn by 2026-27.), adding:
With the Chancellor likely reaching deep into that sofa to find the pennies, a cheaper further 1p cut to employee’s National Insurance Contributions may be favoured, costing £4.7bn.
MCR Hotels are the third-largest hotel owner-operator in the US,
MCR says it will work with Camden-based Heatherwick Studio to consider how best to turn BT Tower into a hotel.
Tyler Morse, CEO and owner of MCR, says:
“We are proud to become owners and custodians of the iconic BT Tower.
We will take our time to carefully develop proposals that respect the London landmark’s rich history and open the building for everyone to enjoy.”
Turning a 177 metre-high tower into a hotel sounds like a big challenge.
But MCR does have experience of such projects; it developed the TWA Hotel at New York’s John F. Kennedy airport, which turned JFK’s original terminal building into a hotel with over 500 rooms.
The sale of the BT Tower to hotel chain MCR comes almost 60 years after it was opened for operations by prime minister Harold Wilson, in 1965.
The Tower was London’s tallest building for 16 years, until it was overtaken by the NatWest Tower, which opened in the City of London in 1981.
The BT Tower was open to the public until 1971, when a bomb exploded on the 33rd floor of the Tower. Shortly after the blast the tower and the restaurant were closed to the public.
Looking back at the public finances…new data from HM Revenue and Customs show that tax receipts have jumped by £33.6bn this financial year, to £695.1bn.
That includes a £21.1bn rise in takings from income tax, capital gains tax and national insurance contributions, to £390.9bn.
Nigel Holmes, director for Research and Development at tax services and software provider Ryan, says business tax bills also rose:
“It’s a strong start to the year for HMRC. January’s receipts for business-related taxes totalled £9.3bn, bringing the total from April 2023 – January 2024 to £77.4bn, representing a £8.8bn increase on the same period the year before.
One driver behind the increase in takings will be the Chancellor’s decision to increase Corporation Tax to 25% in April 2023.
“All eyes will be on the upcoming Spring Statement to see if the Chancellor will announce new changes to help boost British businesses.
Last year, full capital expensing was made permanent, enabling companies to deduct the entire cost of their investments on IT and machinery from their taxable profits in the year of spend. Let’s hope that the needs of UK businesses will be at the front and centre of next month’s budget too.
Just in: BT is selling its telecommunications Tower in the centre of London to MCR Hotels, for £275m.
MCR Hotels plan to turn BT Tower into a hotel, which means it will remain as a London landmark for the future, the telecoms group says.
Brent Mathews, property director at BT Group says:
“The BT Tower sits at the heart of London and we’ve been immensely proud to be the owners of this important landmark since 1984. It’s played a vital role in carrying the nation’s calls, messages and TV signals, but increasingly we’re delivering content and communication via other means.
This deal with MCR will enable BT Tower to take on a new purpose, preserving this iconic building for decades to come.”
The Tower, located in Fitzrovia, was built in 1964 by the General Post Office (GPO), and used to spread telecommunications traffic from London to the rest of the country.
But its role in communications has diminished as fixed and mobile technology changes, and its microwave aerials were removed more than a decade ago as they were no longer needed to connect London to the rest of the country.
As well as containing communications equipment and office space, it also contains a viewing galleries and a rotating restaurant on the 34th floor.
The restaurant has gone, but that floor does still spin, and gives some brilliant views over central London. It’s used for hosting corporate and charity events these days (public access ended in 1971 after a bomb blast).
Martin Beck, chief economic advisor to the EY ITEM Club, has analysed today’s public finances, and concluded that Jeremy Hunt will have “limited” headroom to cut taxes while sticking to his fiscal rules.
Beck says:
“January’s outturn, combined with downward revisions to earlier months, means borrowing in 2023-2024 should come in below the OBR’s forecast of £123.9bn. But with the Spring Budget approaching, the Chancellor’s focus will be on how much headroom the OBR projects against his medium-term fiscal targets.
On that issue, the market curve for interest rates over the next few years is lower than that adopted by the OBR in November, which should cut forecast spending on debt interest. And the OBR’s new forecast will incorporate the Office for National Statistics’ (ONS) new and bigger population projections which, all else equal, should raise projections for GDP, employment and tax receipts.
“But against these positives, investors have recently reined back predictions of how much rates will be cut this year, narrowing the gap with the OBR’s assumption. The starting point for the OBR’s new economy forecast is weaker, given the level of cash GDP in Q4 2023 was almost 1% smaller than projected in November. And lower-than-expected inflation will weigh on revenue from the freeze in tax thresholds. On balance, the EY ITEM Club thinks the Chancellor will have room to manoeuvre, but major tax cuts are looking less likely.”
Shares in HSBC have dropped by 4.5% at the start of trading, after missing profit expectations this morning.
In the banking sector, HSBC has nearly doubled the pay packet for its chief executive, Noel Quinn, despite reporting a drop in fourth quarter profits this morning.
HSBC’s earnings took an unexpected hit from its exposure to China’s real estate downturn.
The London-headquartered lender disclosed on Wednesday that it had settled on a £10.6m package for Quinn, marking a significant rise from the £5.6m he received for 2022, thanks to a long-term bonus in HSBC shares worth more than $5m.
The bank also increased its overall bonus pool for staff by 12% to $3.8m.
It came amid a surprise drop in fourth-quarter profits, which fell to $1bn from $5bn a year earlier, primarily due to a $3bn charge linked to the lender’s stake in the Bank of Communications in China, where lenders are struggling with a downturn in the country’s real estate market.
Quinn has told reporters this morning that he still believes China’s real estate market has bottomed out:
Jeremy Hunt will probably only have “limited headroom” in next month’s budget, despite the record surplus racked up in January, predicts Ruth Gregory, deputy chief UK economist at Capital Economics.
Gregory estimates Hunt will only have £15bn to play with, which won’t be enough for a “big pre-election splash”, despite January’s record surplus reported this morning.
She tells clients this morning:
We think that probable downgrades to the OBR’s GDP and inflation projections will mean the Chancellor has just £15bn (0.5% of GDP) to play with whilst still meeting his fiscal rules.
We suspect he will unveil a smaller net giveaway than November’s £21bn of about £10bn (0.4% of GDP) and that he will have to resort to a further squeeze on public spending to meet his fiscal rules.
But resolving the problem of how to deliver such tight spending plans will be a problem left for after the election.
There were reports last week that Hunt was considering billions of pounds of new spending cuts to fund pre-election tax cuts.
That would be on top of the “implausible austerity” already pencilled in for after the election under Hunt’s plans.
Polling last weekend, though, suggested such deep cuts could be counter-productive for the Conservatives, given public concerns over under-funded public services.
Jeremy Hunt could have £21bn of headroom for tax cuts (or, say, spending rises) in March’s budget, estimates Michal Stelmach, senior economist at KPMG UK.
Around a third of that flexibility could be used to freeze fuel duty again, Stelmach explains:
“The latest set of data suggests that borrowing could end 2023-24 at £114 billion. We expect the OBR to upgrade its fiscal outlook on the back of a weaker expected path for interest rates, lower spending on inflation-linked debt, as well as a possible upward revision to their net migration assumptions, which are net positive for the public finances. This could increase the headroom to meet the fiscal mandate to £21 billion, up from £13 billion at the Autumn Statement.
“The policy choice lies between fiscal pragmatism and a stated desire to cut taxes. Accounting for the customary fuel duty freeze could leave the Chancellor with around £14 billion to play with.
This would be enough to afford a 2p cut to the basic rate of Income Tax, also benefitting the pensioners who could not take advantage of the recent reduction in the National Insurance contributions. However, it would inevitably come at a cost of a greater constrain on future policy options. Navigating this delicate balance will be a tricky task in an election year.”
Here’s ONS deputy director for public sector Jessica Barnaby on this morning’s public finances:
“January’s surplus is the largest in nominal terms since monthly records began in 1993, although borrowing in the year to January is only slightly lower than the same period last year.
Tax receipts are always higher in January than other months owing to self-assessed taxes, which often leads to a surplus.
Also, with recent reductions in the RPI rate, interest payable on government gilts and without last year’s energy support schemes, overall expenditure was down on this time last year, despite increased spending on public services and benefits.
“As a proportion of gross domestic product, public sector debt is up on the year, and remains at levels last seen in the 1960s.”
The broader picture is that the UK’s national debt, as a share of the economy, is still the highest since the early 1960s.
The public sector net debt was clocked at £2.646bn at the end of January 2024, or around 96.5% of UK GDP – 1.8 percentage points higher than a year ago.
As this chart shows, the national debt jumped after the financial crisis of 2008, and again after the Covid-19 pandemic.
So far this financial year (since April), the UK has borrowed £3.1bn less than in the same ten months last year.
The ONS says it has revised down its previous estimate of borrowing this year by £5.8bn.
In January, the interest payable on central government debt was £4.4bn, £3.5bn less than in January 2023.
This was the lowest January interest payable since 2021 and £2.7bn less than the £7.1bn forecast by the Office for Budget Responsibility, the ONS says.
This chart shows how the interest bill on the national debt soared in the last couple of years, as inflation surged into double-digit levels – driving up the debt repayment cost on index-linked gilts.
Lindsay James, investment strategist at Quilter Investors, says:
“Since November, RPI has fallen from 5.3% to 4.9% on a 12-month basis. Index-linked gilts, which account for around a quarter of government debt issuance, have interest payments linked to RPI, as opposed to CPI.
This has seen interest payable on index-linked gilts decline significantly since January 2023, but it is a small increase on last month’s interest bill.
Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the economy.
The UK has posted its largest budget surplus for a January in at least 30 years, giving a final healthcheck on the public finances ahead of next month’s budget.
There was a surplus of £16.7bn last month, new data from the Office for National Statistics shows – which is the largest surplus since monthly records began in 1993, and twice as large a surplus as a year ago.
January is typically a good month for the public finances, as it includes the deadline for self-assessment taxpayers to pay what they owe.
The ONS explains:
Each January tax receipts are always higher than in other months, owing to receipts from self-assessed taxes; combined self-assessed income and capital gains tax receipts were £33.0 billion, £1.8 billion less than a year earlier.
City economists had expected an even larger surplus, though, of £18.7bn.
Central government tax receipts rose by £3.9bn year-on-year, to £111.4bn in January, lifted by a rise in takings from corporation tax, income tax and Value Added Tax (VAT).
Self-assessed (SA) tax receipts were a little lower than last January – although some of this money may show up in February’s public finances.
On the other side of the national balance sheet, net social benefits rose by £3.4bn in January to £23.7bn.
The ONS explains:
In recent months we have seen large increases in benefit payments largely because of inflation-linked benefits uprating and cost-of-living payments.
Ending the energy support schemes which provided subsidies to consumers and businesses also cut the government’s spending bill.
Encouragingly, the interest payment on the national debt also fell, due to the drop in inflation over last year (used to set the repayment on index-linked bonds).
Today’s data also shows that the UK has run up a deficit of £96.6bn so far this financial year.
That’s £9.2bn less than forecast by the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR), which may give chancellor Jeremy Hunt some wriggle room for tax cuts in the Budget.
But, the Resolution Foundation is warning this morning that any tax giveaways next month will be squeezed in between £20bn of tax increases already implemented and a further £17bn of hikes pencilled in for after polling day.
Calling this a “tax sandwich”, Resolution lay out what lies ahead for taxpayers:
Tax rises of around £20 billion were introduced in 2023-24, including freezing personal tax thresholds and increasing Corporation Tax.
Highly unusually, the government has also pre-announced major tax rises for after the next election, with a further £17 billion of tax rises set to come into effect in the next parliament, including a Spring 2025 Stamp Duty rise and three extra years of tax threshold freezes.
History, and significant spending cuts pencilled in for after the election, tell us that further tax rises may well be announced after polling day – as we saw in 1993, 1998, 2011, 2016 and 2020.
Also coming up today
Financial markets are bracing for two important events this evening (UK time). The US central bank will release the minutes of its last monetary policy meeting, where it left interest rates at a 23-year high; they’ll be strutinised for hints as to when cuts may come.
And after Wall Street closes, chip giant Nvidia will release its latest financial results. Given Nvidia’s share pruce has more than tripled in the last year, lifted by AI enthusiasm, the stakes are high.
Ipek Ozkardeskaya, senior analyst at Swissquote Bank, says Nvidia’s numbers will be the “most expected earnings of the quarter today”, adding:
Nvidia is expected to announce a sales revenue of around $20bn in the Q4 and earnings per share of $4.60. The numbers are huge if you think that sales were worth around $6 billion, and EPS was just 88 cents a year ago.
We are talking about a more than 200% sales growth – which, no matter if the company meets expectations or not – is HUGE. But of course, the price action was big too. Nvidia is up by more than 400% since the beginning of 2023. This is why any correction could be massive.
The agenda
7am GMT: UK public finances for January
11am GMT: CBI industrial trends survey of UK manufacturing
2pm GMT: Bank of England policymaker Swati Dhingra gives a speech on ‘Recent BoE projections – key factors/judgements’
2.15pm GMT: Treasury Committee to question forecasters about economic modelling ahead of Spring budget
3pm GMT: Eurozone consumer confidence report for February
7pm GMT: Federal Reserve releases minutes of its latest FOMC meeting
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2024-02-21 09:57:56Z
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