logo
#

Latest news with #AnthonyWalker

Cocktail bar in former Towcester Lloyds bank granted alcohol licence
Cocktail bar in former Towcester Lloyds bank granted alcohol licence

BBC News

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • BBC News

Cocktail bar in former Towcester Lloyds bank granted alcohol licence

A former high street bank could be turned into a cocktail bar after a council granted an alcohol licence to the applicant hopes to open The Vault Cocktail Lounge in Towcester, Northamptonshire, at the site of the former Lloyds Bank on Watling Street Northamptonshire Council approved the application to serve alcohol every day from 11:00 to 00:00, but further planning and licensing permissions are still needed for the venue to committee heard objections, but was told the applicant runs a pub in the town with "no issues with noise and [he] makes sure everything is run correctly". A change of use application to get planning permission to convert the building into a bar and make some small physical changes is still application currently has 10 letters of objection from members of the public, the Local Democracy Reporting Service said. The licencing committee heard from a developer working on nearby homes, and a local resident who both objected to the plans over noise and possible disruption from the well as selling alcohol, the cocktail bar will be allowed to play recorded music agent speaking on behalf of the applicant, Anthony Walker, said: "He's going into this trying to build a business, but it's going to be a premium cocktail bar. "It's going to be nicer people with a more disposable income that want to just sit and chat and have a nice drink."The premises licence was granted on Thursday but a date for a committee meeting to decide on the planning application has not yet been set. Follow Northamptonshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

Australia's Credit Rating at Risk on Election Pledges
Australia's Credit Rating at Risk on Election Pledges

Bloomberg

time29-04-2025

  • Business
  • Bloomberg

Australia's Credit Rating at Risk on Election Pledges

S&P Global Ratings warns that Australia's AAA sovereign credit rating may be at risk if election campaign pledges result in larger structural deficits, debt, and interest costs. Both the Labor and Coalition parties have made large spending commitments, including billions of dollars for new homes, tax cuts, and higher health spending. S&P Global Ratings Director Anthony Walker discusses the outlook and the nation's risks to external shocks amid Trump's tariff war on "Bloomberg: The Asia Trade." (Source: Bloomberg)

Federal election 2025: Spendathon risks Australia's AAA credit rating in rare rebuke
Federal election 2025: Spendathon risks Australia's AAA credit rating in rare rebuke

West Australian

time28-04-2025

  • Business
  • West Australian

Federal election 2025: Spendathon risks Australia's AAA credit rating in rare rebuke

A rare rebuke by global ratings agency S&P has overshadowed Labor's attempts to paint itself the more responsible economic manager, as election sweeteners threaten Australia's top AAA credit rating. Treasurer Jim Chalmers on Monday attempted to outplay the Coalition in the dying days of the campaign by releasing its election costings early. He taunted the Opposition to 'come clean on what their secret cuts' for nuclear reactors mean for Medicare, pensions, housing and other essential budget investments. But the Government's own announcement was undercut when international rating agency S&P Global warned Australia's top tier 'AAA' rating could be jeopardised as election spending commitments pile up. The warning came just hours before the Government released its long-awaited final costings ahead of the May 3 poll. In a report titled Hey Big Spender, S&P warned the nation's top tier AAA rating could be jeopardised if election promises result in 'larger structural deficits, and debt and interest expenses rising more than we expect'. In the lead-up to the pre-election Budget, delivered on 25 March, Labor outlined an additional $70b in new spending over the forward estimates, resulting in an underlying deficit of $42.1 billion next year, pushing Federal debt above $1 trillion in the 2025-26 financial year. Of particular concern to S&P was the continued use of so-called 'off budget' spending, such as the National Broadband Network, Clean Energy Finance Corporation, Snowy Hydro, and Housing Australia. Labor's decision to wipe $16b from student HECS debt also falls into the category. The continued use of off budget spending was becoming a concern for S&P, who said they would look past the government's preferred fiscal metric, the underlying cash balance. 'A proliferation of 'off budget' spending programs... is increasingly obfuscating Australia's fiscal position and borrowing needs. The annual change in net general government debt... better reflects the country's underlying fiscal position because it captures all spending within it. 'Off-budget' spending would be more than A$100 billion between fiscal 2025 and 2029,' S&P country analyst Anthony Walker wrote. The Budget is relying on a return to long-run growth levels that are also in serious doubt if the trade war instigated by Donald Trump continues to wrack the global economy. 'These commitments... will need to be funded at a time when the government is grappling with rising international trade tensions, economic uncertainty, and fast growing structural spending such as the National Disability Insurance Scheme, defence, health, aged care, and interest on government debt,' Mr Walker wrote. 'If major election commitments aren't funded via additional revenues or savings, the deficit could widen further.' Spending by the States was adding to Australia's poor fiscal position, with S&P noting that 'lax fiscal discipline at the state level has seen big-spending state governments remain in large deficits'. Federal and State public spending has hit a post war high of almost 27 per cent of Gross Domestic Product, while total Federal and State deficits that are predicted to hit 2.5 per cent of GDP — a level not seen since the global financial crisis — notwithstanding the pandemic. With the Federal government likely to act as a backstop for any State defaults, S&P Global combines total government debt in its rating calculations, which can have an impact on how much Australia would pay for borrowing money on global markets. Australia has held the top AAA rating since February 2003 and is one of only 11 countries among the 139 rated by S&P to be accorded the top status. Other countries with AAA ratings include Canada, Denmark, Germany, Singapore and Sweden. S&P said Australia had maintained the status thanks to 'sound fiscal management across multiple governments over several decades' but the agency worries that the current round of election commitments don't have a clear revenue offset. Mr Chalmers accused the Coalition of committing more than $60b in policy pledges during the campaign, on top of a $600b investment for its nuclear power plan — a figure the Opposition disputes. 'The test for the Coalition, which should release their costings and their cuts immediately, is whether or not the costings that they release includes all of those tens of millions of dollars of commitments they've made,' he said. Labor's costings suggested a $1b improvement over the Pre-Election Economic and Fiscal Outlook, with additional spending, such as the $10b first home buyer scheme, to be offset by $6.4b in savings from reducing spending on consultants in the public service and and additional $760m in revenue from higher visa application fees for international students. Dr Chalmers said this added to the overall 'responsible economic management' that had seen Labor engineer the biggest nominal Budget turnaround in a Parliamentary term on record. Labor has consistently touted an improved Budget position of more than $207b over the seven years to 2028-29, although deficits are forecast well into the future and debt is now projected to exceed $1 trillion in the 2025-26 financial year. Labor's costings announcement now adds pressure to the Coalition to reveal the financial details of its own policies. Shadow treasurer Angus Taylor refused to be drawn when pressed on Sky news to do so, only revealing that 'you will see them in the next couple of days.' 'The sneak preview is our position will be stronger. You can rest assured that under a Liberal National Government, you will have a position which which delivers a stronger economy, stronger productivity, stronger real wages,' he said. The Coalition has come under fire in recent weeks to explain how it intends to save its estimated $7b by cutting 41,000 Canberra public servants, and how it will pay for a $21b hike in defence spending. Independent economists, Chris Richardson and Saul Eslake have both lamented the lack of vision and transparency across both parties in addressing the country's long term fiscal future. Mr Richardson said the warning from S&P had come too late, and that the 'horse has well and truly bolted' in terms of the trend of Budget discipline. Mr Eslake was scathing that costings had come so late in the campaign. 'Both major parties are treating voters like mugs dropping this stuff in the last week of the election campaign, when at least a quarter, if not more, of the electorate have already voted,' he said. Greg Jericho, chief economist at the Australia Institute, described Labor's savings over four years as a 'bit of a rounding error' but added this was to be expected as most of the party's costings had already been included in the March Budget. He downplayed the risk of any change to Australia's AAA rating but highlighted the spotlight on 'off budget funds' that had snowballed over the past two decades. 'That does make for more of an opaque budgetary situation,' he said. More generally, the country had become 'too fixated on the deficits' rather than on the quality of spending, added Dr Jericho. Both parties were guilty of avoiding necessary structural reforms to the tax system. 'We have a lot of tax breaks that don't do a lot of good for our economy,' he said. 'Neither party has looked at improving our tax base.'

Government GDP spending sitting ‘five to six' per cent higher than historical averages
Government GDP spending sitting ‘five to six' per cent higher than historical averages

Sky News AU

time28-04-2025

  • Business
  • Sky News AU

Government GDP spending sitting ‘five to six' per cent higher than historical averages

S&P Global Director Anthony Walker discusses the higher GDP spending in Australia and how there are limited signs of stagnation or attempts to pull it back down to 'historical averages'. 'It is one of the concerns we have, and it is not just at the federal level, this is going across all the states as well … spending was around 20 per cent of GDP for the last 40 years,' Mr Walker told Sky News Australia. 'What we are seeing now is that it is around 26 to 27 per cent. We knew it was going to be there during COVID, but most countries have started trying to pull that back … five or six per cent higher than historical averages.'

S&P warns Australia's AAA rating at risk from election pledges — here's how and why
S&P warns Australia's AAA rating at risk from election pledges — here's how and why

Mint

time28-04-2025

  • Business
  • Mint

S&P warns Australia's AAA rating at risk from election pledges — here's how and why

S&P Global Ratings warned Australia's prized AAA sovereign credit rating may be at risk if election campaign pledges result in larger structural deficits, debt and interest costs, highlighting fiscal pressures facing the next government. 'The budget is already regressing to moderate deficits as public spending hits post-war highs, global trade tensions intensify, and growth slows,' analysts Anthony Walker and Martin Foo wrote in a note on Monday. 'How the elected government funds its campaign pledges and rising spending will be crucial for maintaining the rating.' Australian Elections: What Have Parties Promised? Australia's major parties have made large spending commitments during a tight campaign ahead of Saturday's election, from setting aside billions of dollars to build new homes for first-time buyers to tax cuts and higher health spending. S&P also pointed to more than A$100 billion ($64 billion) in 'off-budget' spending that's expected between fiscal 2025 and 2029 to reinforce its fiscal concerns. To date, markets have remained largely unperturbed by higher government spending, with Australia's debt and deficits both relatively low by global standards. Australian government bond futures rose strongly early on Monday while yields on the 10-year paper are well below US peers. Australian credit-default swaps jumped along with many others after US President Donald Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariffs, but they have since come down to be back in line with the average over the past year. Australia Credit Rating: What Do Analysts Say? The implications of increased spending for the Reserve Bank are potentially mixed, economists say, given the US-led upheaval in trade is already threatening to dim the global economic outlook. Morgan Stanley strategists said that based on current opinion polls the ruling Labor Party will form a minority government, requiring deals with smaller parties and independent candidates to secure a parliamentary majority. Such an outcome could put downward pressure on public spending, they said in a note. 'Government spending contributed the entirety of Australia's economic growth in 2024, so the trajectory of fiscal policy is clearly consequential to the outlook,' Morgan Stanley said. 'A minority government would pose more near-term risk for growth, given the experience of the last minority government (2010) was a subsequent sharp slowing in public spending.' The RBA's monetary policy board next meets on May 19-20 and is widely expected to cut interest rates by a quarter percentage point to 3.85%. Money market pricing implies the cash rate will slip below 3% by December compared with economists' estimate of 3.35%. A Bloomberg survey of economists published on Monday showed Australia's economic growth will pick up to 1.9% this year, from 1.1% in 2024, and then accelerate further to 2.3% in 2026. But that outlook might be revised once there is greater clarity on the US trade regime. 'Sound fiscal management across multiple governments over several decades underpins our 'AAA' rating on Australia,' the S&P analysts said. 'Sound fiscal outcomes have ensured Australia's debt metrics remain a key rating strength.' Australian Economy Status Australia's fiscal balance is projected to tip back into deficit in the year-ending June 2025, after two consecutive surpluses. At the same time, the nation's state governments are spending heavily as well. 'This could drive the general government fiscal deficit wider to 2%-2.5% of GDP, a level rarely seen since the immediate aftermath of the global financial crisis (outside of pandemic-affected years),' S&P said. 'If major election commitments aren't funded via additional revenues or savings, the deficit could widen further.' Australia is among just a handful of countries in the world to hold a AAA rating from all three agencies — S&P, Fitch Ratings and Moody's Investors Service. — With assistance from Garfield Reynolds. ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Disclaimer: This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text. Only the headline has been changed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store