By Sinead Cruise and Naomi Rovnick
LONDON (Reuters) - Higher capital gains taxes (CGT) could give Britain's risk-averse savers further cause to shun UK stocks, fund managers and advisers say, potentially damaging Britain's economy more than a threatened exodus of tax-shy multi-millionaires.
Speculation about Prime Minister Keir Starmer's fiscal roadmap due on Oct. 30 has dominated headlines since he said taxpayers with the "broader shoulders" would have to help fill a 22 billion pound ($28.58 billion) hole in public finances.
Taking a bigger slice of investment profits is one way Starmer could plug the void. Demanding more tax from elite entrepreneurs known as non-doms, who live in Britain but pay little or no UK tax on overseas wealth, is also being explored.
Some non-doms have threatened to quit Britain in protest, stoking fears in the market about asset firesales and the size of their future contribution to UK tax revenues, which reached almost 9 billion pounds ($11.6 billion) in 2023, Oxford Economics data shows.
But hiking CGT, which investors pay on stock market profits, is a bigger economic gamble for the government than upsetting the super-rich, especially given Britons' already meagre appetite for UK equities and a worsening pensions savings crisis.
Returns from UK equities have struggled to keep pace with global peers since the 2016 vote to leave the European Union, with more than $100 billion flowing out of UK equity funds in the last four years on a net basis, London Stock Exchange data shows.
"You're asking the general man or woman who is already risk averse and doesn't want to invest in equities they now have to give up a lot more of their gain," said Shaniel Ramjee, senior investment manager at Pictet Asset Management.
"This defeats the purpose of trying to create long-term financial security for the population."
Eren Osman, managing director of wealth management at Arbuthnot Latham, said his firm was advising high net worth clients to cut their UK equity positions, reversing a buy recommendation made just prior to the July 4 general election.
A spokesperson for the UK Treasury did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
"DOOM LOOP"
While it is common for the financial industry to warn about the unintended consequences of tax reforms, fears about a "doom loop" in UK stock markets have increased.
Even though CGT rates in Britain are already lower than headline rates in most European economies, including France, Germany and Italy, demand for domestic stocks, considered essential to a thriving economy, continues to slide.
Pension funds and insurers held 45.7% of all UK-listed shares in 1997. The level has dropped to a record low of 4.2%, the latest study of ownership by the Office of National Statistics showed.
Fund managers said any tax rise that increased the cost of risk for shareholders may make it harder for British businesses to tap the funding they need from capital markets, including "mom and pop," or retail, investors at risk of financial hardship in later life.
Working age adults who avoid equity investments are likely to have smaller retirement pots than those who do not, because stocks offer higher long-term returns than bonds and have greater potential to beat inflation.
Data from Barclays found 13 million UK adults - who already have more than six months of income in rainy-day savings - are sitting on 430 billion pounds of "possible investments" in cash.
The rhetoric of troubled public finances and a more burdensome tax regime has dented confidence across the entire wealth spectrum, Nick Lawson, portfolio manager at Julius Baer International, told Reuters.
Lawson said some clients had already cashed in their gains in UK stocks, to avoid higher tax bills and possible losses from wider forced selling across the market if hikes are confirmed.
Canaccord Genuity fund manager Eustace Santa Barbara said budget uncertainty worsened a shortage of capital available to UK companies that already lack support.
According to the Capital Markets Industry Taskforce, the UK economy needs additional investment of 100 billion pounds a year over the next decade to support a 3% economic growth rate.
But UK equity funds reported almost $6 billion of outflows in September alone, putting them in the bottom 10 of all fund categories tracked by Lipper for the month.
Increasing the highest tax bands can be unpopular even among those who may never be subject to that tax, according to Kevin O'Shea, director of wealth planning at RBC Wealth Management.
"Curtailing that ambition across the wider population could reduce the incentive to innovate and take risk, which could have wider ramifications," he added.
Concerns about CGT hikes have already pushed one in four entrepreneurs to fast-track business exits over the last 12 months, research from Evelyn Partners showed, which could extend a multi-year lull in UK listings activity.
"The real risk here is that this could create a chill for retail investors of all wealth brackets," Antonia Medlicott, CEO of Investing Insiders, said.
"The government needs to strike a balance so that these changes don't accidentally end up scaring off those they're trying to get to invest more," she said.
($1 = 0.7699 pounds)