How Long Will Liz Truss Last as UK’s Prime Minister?

Truss Timeline Synopsis 

On Tuesday, September 6, Boris Johnson officially stepped down and Queen Elizabeth II invited Truss to form a government. It’s been downhill for Truss ever since. 

On September 23, all hell broke loose in the UK’s bond market when Truss’s Treasury Chief (Chancellor of the Exchequer), Kwasi Kwarteng, announced a “mini-budget” including 45 billion pounds of unfunded tax cuts coupled with huge increases in government borrowing.

The British pound, already pressured since April of 2021, went into a freefall, falling about 10 percent in one day, since recovered. 

On October 3, Truss backpedaled on unfunded tax cuts.

British Pound Collapse

British Pound chart courtesy of StockCharts.

In response, the Bank of England announced an emergency bond buying program.  

However, on October 11, I noted the Bank of England Warns Pension Funds “You’ve Got Three Days to Wind Up Positions”

The BOE also warned of  ‘Material Risk’ to UK financial stability.

https://twitter.com/CntrlPimpernel/status/1579910243014017024

30-Year Index-Linked Gilt Cash Price

Chart courtesy of Bloomberg

Gilts are UK government bonds. The above chart is for indexed-linked (inflation) bonds.

What About Derivatives?

On October 14, Liz Truss fired Kwasi Kwarteng replacing him with Jeremy Hunt. She also cancelled some of the tax cuts, but remained adamant that tax cuts are the right idea.

“I am absolutely determined to see through what I have promised,” Truss said.

Can Truss Survive This?

The US has no equivalent of a vote of confidence, but the Tory party can bring her down if it wanted to. 

Their fear is Truss will be in power when the next national elections are held in two years.

With that backdrop, please consider the WSJ article U.K. Prime Minister Liz Truss Battles to Hang On After Budget U-Turn

Having fired her chancellor of the exchequer days ago, U.K. Prime Minister Liz Truss must now battle to save her own job after what many political analysts and members of her own party regard as the worst start to a British premiership in modern times. 

Ms. Truss’s popularity rating is the lowest of any British prime minister since the early 1990s, according to polls, after a turbulent few weeks that saw her plan to boost growth through the biggest tax cuts in a generation cause turmoil on U.K. financial markets, forcing the new leader to retreat from her signature economic program—the pillar of her campaign to replace ousted former Prime Minister Boris Johnson just six weeks ago.

Now, Conservative Party lawmakers must weigh a basic calculation: Can the party head to elections, which must be held within two years, with Ms. Truss as the face of the party or is she irreversibly damaged? 

“I doubt if she can last long, I give her at most a few weeks, maybe less,” said Vernon Bogdanor, professor of government at King’s College London. Top of mind for many Conservative lawmakers will be whether Ms. Truss is so toxic now that going to the polls would mean an electoral wipeout and cost them their jobs. “They will be motivated by fear of losing their seats,” he said.

The WSJ comments that the rate of collapse in Ms. Truss’s political authority is unprecedented in modern British politics.

This post originated at MishTalk.Com

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27 Comments
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ajc1970
ajc1970
3 years ago
“Their fear is Truss will be in power when the next national elections are held in two years.”

No longer a fear…

Scooot
Scooot
3 years ago
I don’t see any point in the Tories changing their leader now or soon, they’d need a miracle worker to make much difference in their polling. The risk is they make it worse, if that’s possible. It’s a bit of a poisoned chalice. I’d think they’ll leave it to nearer the election when who ever it is can reduce the election loss before there’s time to fully judge the new leader.
Scooot
Scooot
3 years ago
Reply to  Scooot
Got that totally wrong. What a shambles.
spa sidechats
spa sidechats
3 years ago
Rumor is they are going to bring in the Sundar guy to try to built support to end the war which should have been done before it even started. She did her job of talking smack but the smack talking phase is over. Sundar (spelling?) is also a strong business man. He can’t solve the pension problem but he knows how to at least make it look like it’s under control. I give her 2 months or so. I agree with others, way in over her head. In normal times she could skate easily but things are off the hardball.
Salmo Trutta
Salmo Trutta
3 years ago
“The expansion of excess reserves in turn has placed extraordinary downward pressure on the overnight federal funds rate. Paying interest on excess reserves will better enable the Desk to achieve the target for the federal funds rate”
Interest rate suppression was not “More Significant than You Think”. It stoked asset bubbles. It lowered the real rate of interest that saver-holders relied upon, that pensioners relied upon. It created trillions of negative real rates of interest. It is backwards.
You get higher real rates of interest by activating monetary savings, completing the circuit income velocity of funds. I.e., funds transferred through the nonbanks increases the supply of loan funds, but not the supply of money (a velocity relationship). And this does not decrease the size of the payment’s system. Where do you think velocity has gone? An increase in monetary savings shrinks gDp. Eliminating Reg. Q ceilings caused secular stagnation.
Banks are not intermediaries. If the commercial bankers are
given the sovereign right to create legal tender, then the DFIs must be
severely circumscribed in the management of both their assets and their
liabilities – or made quasi-gov’t institutions.
ZZR600
ZZR600
3 years ago

The
problem is the UK economy is entirely dependent on a Ponzi scheme known as ‘The
Housing Market’. For decades this has stifled investment in other areas of the
economy and effectively made the population captive to debt. Add to this:

· Low productivity

· a record number of people on long term sickness.

· A crash in birth rates of 15%

· A spike in excess mortality of 15%.

· Accident and emergency queues of 15hrs +

· Dentists and doctors who have become like fabled unicorns….

· A mountain of debt or personal and government debt…
I’m surprised the £ has not collapsed below parity with the $ already
Maximus_Minimus
Maximus_Minimus
3 years ago
Reply to  ZZR600
Describes perfectly every “developed” country. The only saving grace is that the “un-developed” world is far worse off.
It’s a competitive collapse, and that’s why the pound is relatively steady.
Felix_Mish
Felix_Mish
3 years ago
“Unfunded tax cuts”? Really, if you were a man from Mars, what could you imagine such words mean?
RonJ
RonJ
3 years ago
Reply to  Felix_Mish
That your earnings belong to the government.
“You will own nothing and be happy.”
LM2022
LM2022
3 years ago
On a personal level I can’t help feeling bad for her. That said, she’s clearly in over her head and overestimated her own abilities. She’ll be gone before the new year for sure. Only question is whether there’ a general election or not. This current crop have no mandate to continue.
TexasTim65
TexasTim65
3 years ago
She reminds me of Kim Campbell, a short lived Canadian female PM. After 6 months she was so despised her party suffered a historic defeat it took decades to recover from.
Jojo
Jojo
3 years ago
This question is asked on the BBC News program all day long, every day. It is beyond annoying BBC, if anyone from your org is reading this blog. Whomever replaces her will not matter. Or to quote from the Who:
“Meet the new boss same as the old boss”
MPO45
MPO45
3 years ago
Liz Truss? What does it matter? As I stated before, we churn through politicians like tissue paper with many hoping that the next one will be the savior. It’s not going to happen. Perhaps the better question would be, “After Liz Truss vacates the position, will people finally realize they are on their own and there is no savior?”
How did BoJo’s brexit go? What about that Farage clown and all the brexit promises? Still waiting for Superman….
dtj
dtj
3 years ago
How long will Liz Truss last?
About as long as a Big Mac within sight of Donald Trump.
Matt3
Matt3
3 years ago
Why don’t we make the people that took all of the risk with derivatives fail? If they can’t fail then they shouldn’t be allowed to invest in these securities.
Too big to fail needs to be stopped. Let then fail!!!
PapaDave
PapaDave
3 years ago
Reply to  Matt3
Good luck with that. Why don’t you focus on creating your own wealth instead of wishing for something that isn’t going to happen?
Zardoz
Zardoz
3 years ago
Reply to  PapaDave

Reactionaries gonna react.

Maximus_Minimus
Maximus_Minimus
3 years ago
Reply to  Matt3
Simple. Pensioners have no part in the decisions of the management, and no idea about the risks whatsoever – even if that information was available to them, which mostly isn’t. Most of them are dumb as rocks. They need legislative protection.
The rest of the funds, the hedge funds, should go bankrupt since their members are well off, and just seeking to maximize profits.
MPO45
MPO45
3 years ago
Reply to  Matt3
Many people here still don’t get it. Where do people here think hedge funds get their money? They are hired by pension managers of entities like teachers unions, police unions, city unions, etc. to maximize returns. If hedge funds go bankrupt then basically all pensions go bankrupt, they get dumped on the taxpayer which then pays out $0.10 on the dollar.
Hedge funds don’t have a magical pool of money from the elite or any other source, that money is likely yours from a pension or retirement account. The funny thing about all of this is repubs want to privatize social security and guess who would end up managing that money if it happens.
If you have a 401k, carefully look at all the “investment vehicles” offered to you. Virtually all of them require you to pay 1% or more to someone, it’s all one big scam. I only invest in 401k for the free match and tax deduction, i keep most of that money in money market to avoid fees. When I change jobs I roll that out of whatever 401k provider that is as quickly as possible into a low cost brokerage account.
MPO45
MPO45
3 years ago
Reply to  MPO45
I’ll just leave this link here, the smart ones will read between the lines, the others…well you can lead a horse to water but you can’t make it drink.
Maximus_Minimus
Maximus_Minimus
3 years ago
The old fashioned incompetence would barely be noticed had it not been for the harebrain pension fund schemes which should not have been allowed in the first place, but were necessitated by the equally harebrain ZIRP of BoE.
Then BoE had a few sleepless days/weeks saving the financial casino from itself.
It’s called karma.
MarkraD
MarkraD
3 years ago
“unfunded tax cuts coupled with huge increases in government borrowing.”
Reaganomics!
It’s her own fault for not telling England they’re “job creating” tax cuts that will pay themselves back.
Cut taxes for the wealthy, call it “job creating, the wealthy then fund your campaigns with a fraction the money they save.
What could possibly go wrong?
.
Roy
Roy
3 years ago
This phrase can only be stated by a socialist: “including 45 billion pounds of unfunded tax cuts.”
There is no such thing as unfunded tax cuts. There is such a thing as unfunded spending.
I can’t begin to determine how long Liz Truss will last. The scene reminds me of a Richard Pryor movie called “Moving” Pyor plays an engineer who obtains a dream job, moves across the country, and has just sat down at his desk when the press runs into his office demanding to know about delays, budget overruns, and corruption on a city project. His immediate reply? “I just sharpened my pencil!”
What I do know is that the mess was there and growing, long before Liz Truss took office. That she abandoned Kwasi Kwarteng so quickly says that she either didn’t really believe he could pull this off, or that she is more willing to abandon people than to face the wrath of the Globalists. Either way, the UK is doomed. They need someone really strong to guide them out of this mess decades in the making. We are close to facing the same situation here in the US. Will we avoid it?
PapaDave
PapaDave
3 years ago
Reply to  Roy
She’s a Libertarian.
HippyDippy
HippyDippy
3 years ago
And it all comes tumbling down — John Cougar Mellencamp. Just so hilariously fitting. These so-called elites just can’t help but shoot themselves in the foot right out the gate. It would never get old, but the rest of the population was stupid enough to let them be in charge of everything. Situation normal in clown world.

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