UK Bank Shares Surge After Budget Spares Lenders From New Taxes
Investors cheer Finance Minister Reeves’ decision to exempt banks from fresh levies, sending shares sharply higher
Share prices of Britain’s major banks leapt on Wednesday after the 2025 budget delivered by the government omitted any new taxes on the banking sector — a move that relieved long-running market anxiety over a potential “windfall” levy on lenders.
Domestic lenders such as Lloyds Banking Group and NatWest Group saw gains of roughly 3.8 percent and 2.5 percent respectively, while more internationally oriented banks such as Barclays and HSBC advanced by around 3.2 percent and 1 percent — outperforming the broader market benchmark.
([Reuters][1]) For weeks, the banking sector had braced for the possibility of new levies.
Earlier in August, a prominent think tank Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) proposed a tax on the income banks earn from reserves held at the central bank, a suggestion that triggered sharp sell-offs when markets first heard the idea.
([euronews][2]) The rebound came as investor sentiment turned: by omitting any mention of bank-specific taxes in both the fiscal statement and an unusually early analysis from the independent budget watchdog, the government signalled it would spare the sector from additional fiscal burden this round.
([Reuters][1]) The reprieve is not only a relief for shareholders — many believe the decision underscores the government’s recognition of banks’ vital role in supporting business lending and economic growth.
Banks have posted strong post-pandemic profitability and remain key engines of credit supply despite structural headwinds including margin pressure and deposit outflows.
([Financial Times][3]) Analysts are now dividing the sector into two camps: large diversified banks with global revenue streams, which seem better positioned to absorb broader economic uncertainty, and smaller, UK-focused lenders, which remain vulnerable to interest-rate volatility and lower domestic loan demand.
For the broader financial market, the results signal a preference among policymakers to avoid destabilising an industry still recovering from recent regulatory and economic shocks.
([Interactive Investor][4]) With no fresh bank taxes and improved investor confidence, the sector has gained a breathing space — though risks remain from macroeconomic headwinds.
For now, though, the message is clear: UK banking remains open for business.