Daily Mail

Britain is full steam ahead, declares Bank

BUFFETT DENOUNCES SPAC BOOM AS ‘A KILLER’

- By Hugo Duncan and Lucy White

US investor Warren Buffett has branded the Spac boom ‘a killer’ as he criticised greedy City advisers.

The 90-year-old (pictured) became the latest to slam Spacs – or Special Purpose Acquisitio­n Companies – at the weekend shareholde­r meeting of his company Berkshire Hathaway.

Spacs, also known as ‘blank cheque companies’, are empty firms which list on the stock market, raising millions from investors with the purpose of buying an existing company.

Usually led by a prominent investor, they have become increasing­ly popular in the aftermath of the pandemic. ‘It’s a killer,’ said Buffett, explaining that the amount of money being funnelled into Spacs meant they now had the edge over companies like his when deal-making.

Buffett’s right-hand man Charlie Munger said many City firms and hotshot investors launching Spacs were not buying companies ‘because it’s a good investment. They’re buying it because the adviser gets a fee. And of course, the more of that you get, the sillier your civilisati­on is getting.’

Munger said the boom also indicated a ‘moral failing’ because City advisers were making ‘easy money’. He added: ‘I think we have a lot to be ashamed of in current conditions.’

BRITAIN’S economy is recovering from the coronaviru­s recession faster than expected as the vaccine rollout continues, the Bank of england will declare this week.

The central bank, led by Governor Andrew Bailey, looks set to raise its growth forecasts for the UK when it publishes its latest monetary policy report on Thursday.

In its last update in February the Bank pencilled in a 5pc rise in output this year following the 9.8pc slump in 2020. Unemployme­nt was also slated to rise to 7.8pc.

But with the outlook improving, this looks too pessimisti­c.

howard Archer, chief economic adviser to forecastin­g group the eY Item Club, said: ‘The economy looks to have started the second quarter very much on the front foot, benefiting from easing of restrictio­ns and the continued vaccine rollout.

‘The further near-term support to the economy provided in March’s Budget also seems to have lifted confidence.

‘ Significan­tly, the labour market is showing resilience and survey evidence points to more confident businesses being prepared to take on workers.’ Goldman Sachs last week said it expected the UK economy to grow by ‘a striking’ 7.8pc this year – the fastest post-war rate of growth. It would see Britain leave the US and the eurozone in its wake.

In another sign of the UK’s recovery, the Institute of economic Affairs (IeA) believes no ‘emergency measures’ are needed to help pay off the £2trillion national debt pile.

In a report published today, the respected think-tank said tax hikes would be ‘futile’, and instead advised Treasury officials to focus on controllin­g spending and introducin­g measures to boost growth.

After analysing other periods when the national debt shot up – during the two World Wars and the Revolution­ary Napoleonic Wars of the 18th-19th centuries – the IeA said: ‘Large- scale debt is far from unknown. And it would be misguided and futile to jump to tax-raising measures.

‘The debt can be coped with and the best way of doing that is to encourage economic growth... by removing unnecessar­y regulation and simplifyin­g taxes.’

Though the Bank is unlikely to hike interest rates just yet, it is expected to slow the pace of Qe at this week’s Monetary Policy Committee meeting.

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