How to get rich from Keir Starmer in Number 10

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sir keir starmer
sir keir starmer

As the dust settles on Labour’s first Budget and investors weigh up just how much Rachel Reeves has cost them, it’s worth considering how to combat higher taxes with higher returns.

It may seem odd to start this article in China, given it’s on the consequences of Labour in Downing Street, but just before Christmas last year, Beijing gave us an object lesson in how the actions of governments can decimate share prices.

The Chinese Communist Party announced restrictions on the incentives that gaming companies can offer to users to encourage them to play. The move caused shares in Tencent, one of China’s internet giants and publisher of the popular Fortnite game, to fall by 16pc at one point.

Giant companies such as Tencent are not supposed to experience such dramatic price changes. If a FTSE 100 company lost 16pc in a day it would be front-page news.

The decisions of the British government can and do affect share prices, however – in both directions.

The value of Trainline, the rail and coach ticketing service, fell by 34pc in May 2021 when ministers said it would face competition from a new app when Britain’s trains were reorganised as Great British Railways. When that decision was reversed in December, shares in the company jumped by 11pc.

On top of the numerous things that can cause unexpected upsets for the share price of any company, investors hardly need another in the form of government whims.

Questor, the Telegraph’s share-tipping column, would be inclined to put at the top of any checklist of investment rules one such as “do not buy shares in any sector or company subject to government interference” were it not for the fact that so many sectors of the economy are nowadays subject to the vagaries of state action.

We should of course bear in mind the possibility that such action can instead be positive for quoted companies in certain circumstances.

Here follows our advice about how to navigate this thicket of threats and opportunities for your investments:

The companies and sectors threatened by a Labour government

In Questor’s view, almost any large company, or any in the public eye, could find itself in the Government’s bad books – or indeed find itself seen simply as an acceptable source of funds to address some perceived public need.

An obvious recent example is the windfall tax imposed on energy companies to pay for government support when prices rose after the invasion of Ukraine.

Pious utterances from politicians about the need to offer business a predictable legislative framework, or to support green energy, are forgotten in the face of public calls for immediate but costly state assistance.