Burnham being PM is already pretty well priced in. When he walked back comments a few weeks ago they corrected and my sense is that the market understands that unless there until actual laws or budgets are promulgated, what is said by Burnham isn't really market moving.
andy_ppp•Jun 22, 2026
What is he going to do without the bond markets - the UK is in so much debt we basically need to jump however high they tell us to, unless he plans to default which would destroy the global financial system and destroy the UK for decades. The only way I can see out of this is to absolutely frack the crap out of the UK and push for more North Sea oil drilling. But we definitely won't do that so maybe we'll try a bit of fascism instead? I'm very unconvinced taxing rich people is possible (unless it is a global agreement) - most of their money can be moved into tax havens and other jurisdictions where HMRC will struggle to tax them.
monkeydust•Jun 22, 2026
I think ...or hope...he ends more right than left and manages to do what Starmer failed to do a year ago which is to make major reforms to the Welfare system. Its just not sustainable.
pjc50•Jun 22, 2026
There really isn't a lot of slack in the welfare system unless you're prepared to be very short sighted and go back to "tent city" levels of homelessness. Which is partly why all previous attempts to cut it have failed. Maybe declaring certain areas of high rent off-limits for housing benefit, but then you have to raise the salaries of NHS staff and teachers living in London so they can afford to work there.
Maybe if the Miliband reforms pay off and certain critical things get built and gas prices return to normal, Labour will be able to take credit for lower electricity prices? Unless it's all spent on datacenters, which would be even worse political doom.
Personally I'd go with the "mansion tax" but that requires ignoring the well-connected screaming. They did manage that with VAT on private school fees.
Urahandystar•Jun 22, 2026
Yeah but the VAT on school fees meant a load of those children had to go to state schools so we ended up paying for it anyway.
cjrp•Jun 22, 2026
Wasn't it something like a 3-4% reduction in private school pupil numbers? And some of those would have ended up homeschooled rather than state.
arethuza•Jun 22, 2026
A rough calculation: £8,580 funding per child at state school, ~90,000 less in private schools and in state schools so about £770 million more required for state school funding and this measure is supposed to bring in about £1.7 billion a year...
So it looks like it would pay for itself?
Edit: We don't charge VAT on private healthcare - so charging it on private education looks a bit inconsistent to me.
matt-p•Jun 22, 2026
As someone who has lived in a 'mixed block' in zone 1, I think it's delusional to characterise social housing tenants as 'teachers and nurses'. I suspect most teachers and nurses are already in private sector housing in London.
I think it could be OK to sell all social hosing in Zone 1/2 and use that money to pay higher wages for teachers and nurses plus state built replacement social housing in zone 4-6. There's probably some other space in the welfare system, look at the motability scandal or the increase in PIP claims.
chadgpt3•Jun 22, 2026
What would happen to the people who live in the houses?
matt-p•Jun 22, 2026
I assume you would build the new social hosing, move folks over then you'll be able to sell the zone 1 houses they came out of and so on and so forth.
arethuza•Jun 22, 2026
A lot of social housing in the UK (about 45%) isn't owned by councils so can't really be sold off by the state?
matt-p•Jun 22, 2026
That's fine that should stay as social housing then. It's probably even better this way as it's still possible to place people who for example absolutely have to be in kensington or islington there.
pjc50•Jun 22, 2026
Social housing is the council budget - I was referring to Housing Benefit.
matt-p•Jun 22, 2026
Isn't it part of the problem that these are two sides of the same coin, yet owned by different people.
dismalaf•Jun 22, 2026
Massive handouts via welfare programs is the only thing that keeps left leaning parties in power anywhere in the west. They've failed at bringing prosperity so they just court retirees, the unemployed and hire more government workers. And unfortunately those who rely on welfare outnumber those who work and pay taxes in a lot of western countries, because of the lack of prosperity... Need to hit rock bottom à la Argentina for people to wake up.
Forgeties79•Jun 22, 2026
I just feel like no matter what any government does the ultra rich will find a way to get around it. Look at the US gulf south: they are in a race to the bottom when it comes to tax breaks and just giving everything away to businesses/high income earners, yet they are poorer than ever. Texas and Florida are the exceptions here to a certain degree but they are also massive states with lots already going for them. Their neighbors collect a fraction of the taxes they should and get nothing out of it except aggressive resource extraction and cancer.
Then look at the other end: are wealthy people and businesses really fleeing New York and California in droves like conservative media is portraying? Do we really see a meaningful wealth exodus occurring because of their corporate and personal tax laws? A cursory search says no. High housing costs, remote work, and just general pandemic shifts explain basically any changes there (and the number of people/businesses leaving isn’t particularly abnormal)
All of this is to say I don’t really know what the solution is for the UK. I just don’t think businesses and the super wealthy respond 1:1 to these policies in the way that politicians claim they do. They are so rich they are ultimately going to live where they want and do what they want. They aren’t going to relocate themselves due to tax policy. They will just “be rich” their way through the problem.
philipallstar•Jun 22, 2026
The ultrarich just don't matter. There are so few of them. And they might avoid personal tax, but they generate insane amounts of other taxes that they are still huge contributors. The people who net don't contribute are going to be state/federal employees, benefits recipients, state pension recipients, that sort of thing.
mathieuh•Jun 22, 2026
The irony is the top three tax havens are overseas territories of the UK and subject to legislation which should curtail their tax-haven status but which the UK is unwilling to enforce
And London is the money laundering capital of the world. It's some ridiculous percentage of their GDP.
gib444•Jun 22, 2026
How do they know what he will do to the economy before even he does? That's impressive
I wasn't referring to his becoming PM but what he does during the premiership, you know, the more important part
inigyou•Jun 22, 2026
How much a politician will make wealthy people wealthier probably correlates pretty well with their left-right axis position multiplied by their amount of power.
greengreengrass•Jun 22, 2026
Disappointing that it seems difficult to actually sign up for – "real-time view" hidden behind layers of legalese and licensing, although it's pleasing to see the fees are effectively nothing for individuals or small firms. They're not exactly in the SaaS-era of live demos or trivial sign-ups for immediate access, are they?
Why do we insist on actually useful interfaces into the economy and banking system being hidden behind such bureaucratic complexity? It's like the Open Banking gift that keeps on giving – if it were truly "Open", I'd have an API I could actually use to talk to all of my banks, rather than what feels like a closed shop (certainly for the average retail individual who just wants a feed from their bank).
cjs_ac•Jun 22, 2026
There’s also a lot of bureaucracy involved in participating in the gilt market directly, rather than using an intermediary.
the tax exemptions make it very attractive place to hold cash versus bank accounts - if your a UK citizen google (or AI) - low coupon gilt investing.
pjc50•Jun 22, 2026
Eh, for most people it's simpler to just use a cash ISA which can provide almost the same rates. Most people don't want or need to carry a huge cash float as opposed to other kinds of investment.
gpderetta•Jun 22, 2026
Well, yes, but after maximizing an ISA that's still an option. Also the government is clamping down on cash ISA.
cjrp•Jun 22, 2026
I think they're clamping down on cash held in Stocks and Shares ISAs, not Cash ISAs.
gpderetta•Jun 22, 2026
As the government wants to encourage people to be invested and not hold cash, from '27 you'll only be able to add 12k in Cash ISA. They are planning to also change the limit on cash held on S&S ISAs to avoid an easy workaround for this limit
cjrp•Jun 22, 2026
Ah I see, I wasn't aware of the Cash ISA change too, thanks.
zipy124•Jun 22, 2026
That only works if the capital is already in an ISA or you want to invest less than £20k (soon to be 12k) though. It is common to use gilts to build a gilt ladder to have some level of guaranteed income for older/retired people. This allows you to build your own cheap annuity.
Pawenniag•Jun 22, 2026
That's probably true
Pawenniag•Jun 22, 2026
This is the frustrating pattern with a lot of "open" financial infrastructure
Pawenniag•Jun 22, 2026
Whether the data will actually be affordable and usable enough for smaller participants or whether it mainly improves tooling for institutions that already had decent access
mark_l_watson•Jun 22, 2026
Potentially, the raising interest rates because investors don’t trust the long term stability of the UK economic system (more spending on pro-war activities, sluggish economic growth, and higher than expected government borrowing) will crash their financial system.
I hope I don’t sound too selfish but I am a USA citizen, and I would rather worry about my own country’s medium-term financial future.
jalev•Jun 22, 2026
The UK's financial system made it out battered but bruised in the 70s which were a magnitude worse than what we have right now (double digit unemployment, inflation double digit, interest rates at like 15%, an IMF bailout...). Any talk of the British financial system collapsing is as realistic as the S&P500 dropping 50% in the near future: sure it can happen but the chances are so statistically small you have a better chance of winning the lottery.
abecedarius•Jun 22, 2026
National debt to GDP was much lower in the 70s.
You might be right that near-term disaster is unlikely, but comparing to a lottery win is ridiculous. Orders of magnitude off.
arethuza•Jun 22, 2026
UK debt to GDP ratio is quite a bit less than that of the US?
noir_lord•Jun 22, 2026
If I was American I’d be worried about the US as well.
You elected a circus.
alex_duf•Jun 22, 2026
>I hope I don’t sound too selfish but I am a USA citizen
The rest of the world is getting tired of worrying about the US's economical situation, whether it the dotcom bubble, the sub-primes, or now the potential AI bubble.
So apologies for being blunt here, but yes it does sound selfish to me
mark_l_watson•Jun 22, 2026
Yes, I do sound like a jerk. Difficult though to not worry about local bullshit a lot more than other country’s bullshit. While I care for every person on our planet, I spend more time thinking about the future of my children and grandchildren.
inigyou•Jun 22, 2026
Who did you vote for?
-1•Jun 22, 2026
As a Canadian, I disagree, don’t think you sound like a jerk with this comment. Makes sense to worry about local problems more than remote ones IMO. Of course I’d be more concerned about my own country’s interest rates than that of a foreign country.
cryptonym•Jun 22, 2026
Let's play a game
> Potentially, the raising interest rates because investors don’t trust the long term stability of the [Guess the country] economic system (more spending on pro-war activities, sluggish economic growth, and higher than expected government borrowing) will crash their financial system.
monooso•Jun 22, 2026
I spent the entire day yesterday trying to set up some automated monitoring of my investments, only to discover most UK market information is locked behind stupid-money APIs.
Anything that improves that situation is a positive.
inigyou•Jun 22, 2026
That's normal in markets and it even makes sense.
Think about it: shouldn't the market be funded by charging fees to the extremely wealthy participants? The alternative is that it's taxpayer funded, which is a tax subsidy to extremely wealthy participants.
dv_dt•Jun 22, 2026
Seems like a bit of a false dichotomy- other alternatives are regulatory requirements or taxes that force or allow the api to be provisioned
inigyou•Jun 22, 2026
You can force markets to make an open API funded by participants, but you can't make it fully open (open API and open participation) if you don't want tax funding because then there's no funding source left. Maybe you decide a fully open market is worth being tax funded, though it's still mostly going to benefit very rich people.
dv_dt•Jun 22, 2026
Why is "no tax funding" a hard requirement? I would think the lowest cost to get that market information publicly shared and forthcoming (and thus increasing the efficiency and effectiveness of the market), would be for a government dept to operate the frontend distribution, but require regulatory submissions of transaction data within reasonable latency windows. It's just a modern form of say US SEC document submissions and EDGAR to distribute.
inigyou•Jun 22, 2026
It's because why should taxes fund things that benefit rich people? It's not far off from taxes funding the caviar at Davos.
Closi•Jun 22, 2026
I don't see why you can't do that?
There's plenty of things that cost money that legislation forces companies to do anyway, regardless of if there is a 'funding source' or not.
Although this particular one is from the FCA so presumably is taxpayer funded anyway.
inigyou•Jun 22, 2026
Well if you mandate they spend money and also mandate they don't get money, they'll shut down.
Closi•Jun 22, 2026
I’m assuming there are other revenue sources (eg transaction charges).
1234letshaveatw•Jun 22, 2026
Only the extremely wealthy participate in the UK? That is most certainly not the case in the US, where your average salaried employee has most of their retirement invested in the market
infecto•Jun 22, 2026
Ehh to be clear even in the US certain markets like bonds are not always that transparent.
macleginn•Jun 22, 2026
They normally don't do self-set-up real-time monitoring though.
inigyou•Jun 22, 2026
Only extremely wealthy people participate in stock markets, in general. Other people use one of those wealthy people as an intermediary.
To participate directly in a market you usually need to lock up at least several million dollars at what is effectively an escrow service, so they can shift it between accounts when transactions happen. All your shares stay locked up in a similar service.
The line graph of stock prices you can see on Google is a lie. Real market data is, like, a live feed of who's buying and selling and at what price and quantity. That doesn't seem very useful to someone who isn't trying to trade on that market, and if you can't trade on that market why bother getting the data?
There also isn't just one market. Any two large financial firms can just agree to directly trade with each other, would you mandate realtime data on that?
monooso•Jun 22, 2026
Several such APIs include the equivalent data for US markets in their free tier, for personal use.
doikor•Jun 22, 2026
Most if not all stock markets are for profit corporations making a lot of profit. They could have api fees at 0 and still make a profit.
dismalaf•Jun 22, 2026
If it's just for personal use see if your bank/broker has an API for market information. Most do even if it's not advertised.
Also some resellers of market information are pretty affordable for personal use.
7 Comments
Signup link here
-> https://ets-connect.co.uk/users/prod-onboarding/
Commercials here:
-> https://ets-connect.co.uk/annual-fees-2026-2027/
Maybe if the Miliband reforms pay off and certain critical things get built and gas prices return to normal, Labour will be able to take credit for lower electricity prices? Unless it's all spent on datacenters, which would be even worse political doom.
Personally I'd go with the "mansion tax" but that requires ignoring the well-connected screaming. They did manage that with VAT on private school fees.
So it looks like it would pay for itself?
Edit: We don't charge VAT on private healthcare - so charging it on private education looks a bit inconsistent to me.
I think it could be OK to sell all social hosing in Zone 1/2 and use that money to pay higher wages for teachers and nurses plus state built replacement social housing in zone 4-6. There's probably some other space in the welfare system, look at the motability scandal or the increase in PIP claims.
Then look at the other end: are wealthy people and businesses really fleeing New York and California in droves like conservative media is portraying? Do we really see a meaningful wealth exodus occurring because of their corporate and personal tax laws? A cursory search says no. High housing costs, remote work, and just general pandemic shifts explain basically any changes there (and the number of people/businesses leaving isn’t particularly abnormal)
All of this is to say I don’t really know what the solution is for the UK. I just don’t think businesses and the super wealthy respond 1:1 to these policies in the way that politicians claim they do. They are so rich they are ultimately going to live where they want and do what they want. They aren’t going to relocate themselves due to tax policy. They will just “be rich” their way through the problem.
https://taxjustice.uk/blog/worlds-top-tax-havens-are-british...
I wasn't referring to his becoming PM but what he does during the premiership, you know, the more important part
Why do we insist on actually useful interfaces into the economy and banking system being hidden behind such bureaucratic complexity? It's like the Open Banking gift that keeps on giving – if it were truly "Open", I'd have an API I could actually use to talk to all of my banks, rather than what feels like a closed shop (certainly for the average retail individual who just wants a feed from their bank).
https://www.dmo.gov.uk/investor-information/retail-investors...
I don’t think the Treasury really wants to deal with amateurs.
NS&I offer a range of retail products - https://www.nsandi.com/guaranteed-returns is a good option but does NOT come with the tax exemption.
I hope I don’t sound too selfish but I am a USA citizen, and I would rather worry about my own country’s medium-term financial future.
You might be right that near-term disaster is unlikely, but comparing to a lottery win is ridiculous. Orders of magnitude off.
You elected a circus.
The rest of the world is getting tired of worrying about the US's economical situation, whether it the dotcom bubble, the sub-primes, or now the potential AI bubble.
So apologies for being blunt here, but yes it does sound selfish to me
> Potentially, the raising interest rates because investors don’t trust the long term stability of the [Guess the country] economic system (more spending on pro-war activities, sluggish economic growth, and higher than expected government borrowing) will crash their financial system.
Anything that improves that situation is a positive.
Think about it: shouldn't the market be funded by charging fees to the extremely wealthy participants? The alternative is that it's taxpayer funded, which is a tax subsidy to extremely wealthy participants.
There's plenty of things that cost money that legislation forces companies to do anyway, regardless of if there is a 'funding source' or not.
Although this particular one is from the FCA so presumably is taxpayer funded anyway.
To participate directly in a market you usually need to lock up at least several million dollars at what is effectively an escrow service, so they can shift it between accounts when transactions happen. All your shares stay locked up in a similar service.
The line graph of stock prices you can see on Google is a lie. Real market data is, like, a live feed of who's buying and selling and at what price and quantity. That doesn't seem very useful to someone who isn't trying to trade on that market, and if you can't trade on that market why bother getting the data?
There also isn't just one market. Any two large financial firms can just agree to directly trade with each other, would you mandate realtime data on that?
Also some resellers of market information are pretty affordable for personal use.