Rishi Sunak will deliver his Autumn Budget and Spending Review to MPs in the Commons today, setting out the government’s spending and financial strategy.
It should take place at around 12:30pm, just after the conclusion of Prime Minister’s Questions.
The chancellor’s address usually lasts around an hour – although in 1853 William Gladstone spoke for an impressive four hours and 45 minutes.
Image: Rishi Sunak is likely to focus his statement on the country’s recovery from COVID-19
It will be Mr Sunak’s second Budget of the year as he delivered a statement on 3 March after the previous autumn’s address was delayed due to the coronavirus pandemic.
It is expected that much of the chancellor’s statement today will focus on the next steps in the UK’s economic recovery from COVID-19.
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Mr Sunak has pledged to “drive growth while keeping the public finances on a sustainable path”.
Alongside the Budget, the chancellor will also set out the resource and capital budgets of the UK government departments for 2022-23 and 2024-25, as well as the devolved administrations’ grants for the same period.
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What has already been announced?
The Treasury has already released a flurry of announcements in the lead up to the Budget, including in areas such as health, wages, transport, housing and education.
Speaker of the House of Commons Sir Lindsay Hoyle made his disproval at the situation known in the Commons on Monday, telling ministers it was “not acceptable” for departments to be briefing the media ahead of MPs.
Image: Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle has given MPs many warnings about briefing announcements to the media before they have been made to MPs. Pic: Jessica Taylor/UK Parliament
Sir Lindsay also reminded the Commons that in 1947, then-chancellor Hugh Dalton resigned after leaking some of the contents of his budget to a journalist.
Here’s what we already know:
Health
Image: NHS England will receive £5.9m to reduce the backlog of people waiting for scans
• NHS England will receive £5.9bn to tackle the backlog of people waiting for tests and scans.
• The sum incudes £1.5bn for more beds, equipment and new “surgical hubs”, £2.3bn on diagnostic tests including the creation of ‘one-stop-shop’ centres for scans and £2.1bn to improve IT in hospitals.
• £5bn for the health department to fund research and development over the next three years.
Wages
Image: The National Living Wage will rise to £9.50 per hour from next April
• millions of nurses, teachers and members of the armed forces will receive a pay rise due to the end of a one-year public sector pay freeze.
Transport
Image: The city regions will be given money to improve their transport networks
• England’s city regions – including Greater Manchester, the West Midlands and West Yorkshire – will receive a share of £6.9bn to spend on rail, bus and cycle projects in their areas.
• However, on Sunday, Mr Sunak admitted to Sky News that only £1.5bn of this is new money, as the government is including £4.2bn that was promised in 2019 alongside funding for buses announced by Boris Johnson in 2020.
Housing
Image: The government is investing in building more houses on brownfield sites
• £1.8bn has been pledged to build around 160,000 “greener homes” on derelict or unused land.
• £9m on “pocket parks” the size of a tennis court across the UK, which it is hoped will create more green spaces.
Education
Image: Around 30,000 more school placed will be created for pupils with special educational needs
• £2.6bn on 30,000 new places for children with special educational needs and disabilities.
• £1.6bn over three years to roll out new T-levels.
• £550m to be invested in adult skills.
Early Years
Image: The Treasury has pledged money to support new parents with their mental health and breastfeeding
• The government has pledged £500m to support parents and young children.
• This includes £82m to fund advice centres for parents, £100m for mental health support, £50m for breastfeeding support and £200m to support families with complex issues.
• Labour has said the new centres are similar to Sure Start children’s centres which the government previously closed, but Mr Sunak insisted this initiative is “broader”.
Other pledges include:
• £3bn to drive a “skills revolution”.
• £1.4bn to international companies to attract foreign talent to UK industries.
• £850m to restore museums and art galleries.
• £700m for football pitches, tennis courts and youth facilities.
• £700m for a new fleet of patrol boats for the UK’s borders.
• £435m for crime prevention and the Crown Prosecution Service – some focused on improving the response to rape and sexual assault cases.
• £5m in research grants to help develop new surgery and treatment options for veterans.
What else is expected to be announced?
While the Treasury has released a deluge of funding announcements in the days before Wednesdays Budget, there are likely to be a few other issues which could be addressed:
Tax changes:
Image: The capital gains tax may be hiked in the Budget
Due to the government’s high borrowing record during the pandemic, taxes are unlikely to be cut in the autumn Budget.
However, it has been pre-empted that Mr Sunak may hike capital gains tax – the tax on the profit when someone sells or disposes of an asset that has increased in value.
It has been suggested that the sum could be brought more into line with income tax. In his last budget, the chancellor froze capital gains tax until 2026.
Student loans:
Image: It is rumoured that the government may lower the student loans repayment threshold
It has been rumoured that the chancellor may lower the threshold at which people start repaying their student loans, which it is predicted could save the Treasury about £2bn a year.
The government is considering recommendations set out in the 2019 Augar review, which said deductions for student loan repayments should be applied once an individual earns £23,000 rather than the current rate of £27,295.
But Conservative former education secretaries are divided on the proposal.
Lord Baker of Dorking, who served as education secretary under Margaret Thatcher, told Sky News he “strongly” supports the proposed reduction.
But Justine Greening told Sky News that introducing such a policy would entrench the equality gaps in education “even further”.
Ms Greening, who stood down as an MP in 2019, said such a change could result in students from poorer backgrounds viewing university as unaffordable.
Alcohol duty changes:
Image: The duty on spirits such as whisky could be increased
There has been suggestion that Treasury officials are wanting to change the current system of alcohol duties as they perceive it as too complicated.
It could see some taxes on beer cut and the cost of sparkling wine falling
But this could also see the duty on spirits such as gin and whisky hiked.
The Small Breweries’ Relief (SBR) could also be reduced, which has left craft and independent brewers concerned that their recovery after the pandemic will be hampered.
Rise in Air Passenger Duty:
Image: Air Passenger Duty could be hiked for long haul flights such as the UK to Australia
Newspapers including The Guardian have reported that the chancellor will confirm plans that have previously been mooted to reform Air Passenger Duty (APD)
At present, APD is charged in two bands – journeys which are fewer than 2,000 miles and those which are greater than 2,000 miles.
It has been suggested a third band could be created for distances over 6,000 miles.
This move would increase the levy for longer journeys which would impact the cost of plane tickets to countries including Australia, South Africa and Japan.
Fuel duty increases:
Image: The average price of petrol hit a record high last weekend
With Glasgow hosting the COP 26 climate summit from 31 October, Mr Sunak has the potential opportunity in his Budget to show how the government is progressing the country’s economy towards carbon neutrality.
This could mean a return to fuel duty increases in the future.
However, the average forecourt price per litre hit a record high of 142.94p on Sunday, and it is suggested this may have forced the chancellor to discount such a proposal.
A 4.9% rise had been scheduled for 2022.
What could be missing from the Budget?
VAT cut on household energy bills:
Image: Treasury sources say cutting household energy bills is unlikely to happen
Reports emerged last month that the chancellor was considering cutting the current 5% VAT rate on household energy bills amid fears of a winter crisis.
However, such a move could frustrate the government’s green ambitions ahead of the COP 26 climate summit in Glasgow next week.
And Treasury sources say such a move would be badly targeted and there are other ways to help those struggling
Announcement on the eastern leg of HS2:
Image: The government is yet to reaffirm its commitment to the eastern leg of HS2
Deflecting a question on the matter on Sky’s Trevor Phillips on Sunday, the chancellor refused to be drawn on the future of the eastern leg and also failed to confirm whether a new Northern Powerhouse Rail link from Leeds to Manchester via Bradford would be built.
HS2 is a planned high-speed rail network between London, the West Midlands, Manchester and Leeds. The project has been beset by delays and rising costs since its announcement.
The Spending Review could be seen as a good time to confirm the future of the project.
However, a government source told Sky News not to expect an announcement on HS2 in the Budget as the matter will be dealt with afterwards when the Integrated Rail Plan is published.
On Sunday, Mr Sunak told Sky News the plan would be published “shortly”.
Responding to Mr Sunak’s comments, Labour’s shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves told Sky News there is a “huge gaping chasm” between the government’s rhetoric and delivery on transport infrastructure in the north.
Universal Credit changes:
Image: The temporary £20 uplift to Universal Credit was removed earlier in October
Earlier this month, the government removed the £20 temporary uplift to Universal Credit which was implemented during the pandemic.
To ease the blow of the cut for claimants, some have been lobbying the Treasury to raise the base figure for in-work recipients to help working families keep more of their money.
This could be done by cutting the taper rate – the amount of Universal Credit withdrawn for every pound someone earns.
However, the taper rate has not been amended for five years.
Business rates reform:
Image: High Street shop owners are calling for business rates to be reduced
In March 2020, a few weeks before the country was placed into lockdown due to the coronavirus, the Treasury promised a fundamental review of how business rates work.
High street shops say they are heavily disadvantaged compared to large Ecommerce stores such as Amazon due to the high sums they must pay for their shop fronts.
However, it is thought that no large-scale reform will be announced in Wednesday’s Budget while the economy continues to recover from the pandemic.
Why is the budget important?
The budget sets out how the government is going to spend the nation’s money so affects us all.
However, it is arguably even more important this year because of the economic impact of the coronavirus pandemic.
The government is still under pressure to use this Budget to outline plans for dealing with how the UK will pay off the huge debts built up during COVID-19 and how the government will continue to support those people and businesses who were disproportionately economically impacted by the pandemic.
Fun facts:
Image: The chancellor is the only member of the House of Commons allowed to drink alcohol in the chamber, according to a historic ritual
• A chancellor can take an alcoholic drink into the Commons to have when they are delivering their budget. It is the only time an MP is allowed to do so
• Sir Geoffrey Howe, who was chancellor from 1979-1983, named his dog Budget.
• The shortest budget speech was delivered by Benjamin Disraeli in 1867 which lasted just 45 minutes
• John Major’s budget in 1990 was the first to be shown live on television
Follow budget coverage live on Sky News with the chancellor’s announcement from 12.30pm
Jay Clayton, recently appointed interim US Attorney for the Southern District of New York (SDNY) and former chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission, has begun offering statements in criminal cases involving crypto fraud.
In an April 23 notice, the US Attorney’s Office said Eugene William Austin, also known as Hugh Austin, had been sentenced to 18 years in prison following his conviction on conspiracy to commit wire fraud, conspiracy to commit money laundering, and conspiracy to commit interstate transportation of stolen property. Together with his son, Brandon, sentenced to four years, Austin offered fraudulent crypto investment services, resulting in roughly $12 million in losses to more than 24 people.
“For years, Hugh Austin was the leader of a fraud and money laundering scheme that stole more than $12 million from more than two dozen victims,” said Clayton. “Austin involved his own son in his crimes, working with him to rip off victims and spending investor money on personal expenses, like luxury hotels […] Austin will now be held accountable for the harm he caused to individual investors and others.”
The criminal case involving digital assets marked one of Clayton’s first public statements since becoming the interim US Attorney on April 22. US President Donald Trump nominated Clayton on Jan. 20 when he took office. The district has since seen the resignation of acting US Attorney Danielle Sassoon in response to the Justice Department directing her to halt a case against New York City Mayor Eric Adams.
The nation’s ‘sovereign district’ overseen by a Trump appointee?
Under current law, Clayton can serve as interim US Attorney for the district for 120 days without Senate confirmation. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer blocked a vote on Clayton’s nomination, saying Trump had “no fidelity to the law.”
Clayton will likely oversee SDNY during the sentencing hearing for former Celsius CEO Alex Mashinsky and potentially other criminal cases involving cryptocurrency. The district is home to Wall Street firms and many of the country’s most prominent financial institutions.
The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) crypto task force, headed by Hester Peirce, has continued meeting with digital asset company representatives as the agency explores regulatory changes.
In an April 24 notice, the SEC task force disclosed a meeting with representatives from crypto firm Ondo Finance and the law firm Davis Polk and Wardwell to discuss “issuing and selling wrapped, tokenized versions of publicly traded US securities.” Ondo Finance donated $1 million to Donald Trump’s inauguration fund, and the law firm announced on April 22 that it would represent the US President’s social media company, Truth Social, to launch crypto-linked exchange-traded funds.
According to the meeting request, Ondo Finance planned to discuss registration requirements for tokenized securities, compliance with financial laws, and potentially launching a regulatory sandbox. Cointelegraph reached out to the firm for comment but did not receive a response at the time of publication.
The April 24 meeting was the latest in the SEC crypto task force’s outreach to the industry following the departure of former chair Gary Gensler. Former commissioner and Trump appointee Paul Atkins took over leadership at the agency on April 21 after his swearing-in ceremony, but has yet to take action on his proposed crypto agenda.
Continuing outreach to industry under new SEC chair
On April 25, the crypto task force will host a roundtable event to discuss custody, including representatives from Kraken, Anchorage Digital Bank, WisdomTree, and others. Following the approval of crypto exchange-traded funds in 2024, many financial institutions have seen demand for digital asset custody in the US grow significantly.
It’s unclear what the SEC’s intentions may be regarding pursuing crypto enforcement cases under Atkins. The commission has stated it will continue cases involving fraudulent activity, but dropped a complaint against Hex founder Richard Heart on April 21.
The agency has already announced it will stop investigations or lawsuits against many firms, including Ripple, Coinbase, and Kraken. All three exchanges donated or had executives who supported Trump’s 2024 campaign or inauguration fund.
Opinion by: Igor Zemtsov, chief technology officer at TBCC
Crypto security is a ticking time bomb. Updatable firmware might just be the match that lights the fuse.
Hardware wallets have become the holy grail of self-custody, the ultimate safeguard against hackers, scammers and even government overreach. There’s an inconvenient truth, however, that most people ignore: Firmware updates aren’t just security patches.
They’re potential backdoors, waiting for someone — whether a hacker, a rogue developer or a shady third party — to kick them wide open.
Every time a hardware wallet manufacturer pushes an update, users are forced to make a choice. Hit that update button and hope for the best, or refuse to update and risk using outdated software with unknown vulnerabilities. Either way, it’s a gamble.
In crypto, a bad gamble can mean waking up to an empty wallet.
Firmware updates aren’t always your friend
Updating firmware sounds like common sense. More security! Fewer bugs! Better user experience!
Here’s the thing: Every update is also an opportunity not just for the wallet provider but for anyone with the power, or motivation, to tamper with the process.
Hackers dream of firmware vulnerabilities. A rushed or poorly audited update can introduce tiny, almost imperceptible flaws — ones that sit in the background, waiting for the right moment to drain funds. And the best part? Users will never know what hit them.
Then there’s the more unsettling possibility: deliberate backdoors.
Tech companies have been forced to include government-mandated surveillance tools before. What makes anyone think hardware wallet makers are exempt? If a regulatory agency — or worse, a criminal organization — wants access to private keys, firmware updates are the perfect attack vector. One hidden function. One disguised line of code.
That’s all it takes. Still think firmware updates are harmless?
Firmware vulnerabilities are already being exploited
This isn’t some far-fetched, doomsday scenario. It has already happened.
Ledger, one of the biggest names in crypto security, had a major security crisis in 2018 when security researcher Saleem Rashid exposed a vulnerability that allowed attackers to replace Ledger Nano S firmware and hijack private keys. Nearly 1 million devices were at risk before a fix was rolled out. The scary part? There was no way for users to know if their devices had already been compromised.
In 2023, OneKey suffered a similar nightmare. White hat hackers demonstrated that its firmware could be cracked in mere seconds. No crypto was lost — this time. But what if real attackers had found the flaw first?
Then came the “Dark Skippy” exploit, taking firmware-based attacks to an entirely new level. With just two signed transactions, hackers could extract a user’s entire seed phrase — without setting off a single alarm. If firmware updates can be manipulated this easily, how can anyone be sure their assets are safe?
The hidden price of updatable firmware
To be fair, not all firmware updates are security disasters. Ledger uses a proprietary operating system and secure element chips for added protection now. Trezor takes an open-source approach, allowing the community to scrutinize its firmware. Coldcard and BitBox02 give users manual control over updates, reducing — but not eliminating — risk.
Here’s the real question: Can users ever be 100% sure that an update won’t introduce a fatal flaw?
Some wallets have decided to eliminate the risk altogether. Tangem ships with fixed, non-updatable firmware, meaning that its code can never be altered once the device leaves the factory. No updates. No patches.
Of course, this approach has its trade-offs. If a vulnerability is discovered, there’s no way to fix it. But in security, predictability matters.
Real crypto security means taking back control
The crypto market was worth $2.79 trillion as of March 2025. With that much money on the table, cybercriminals, rogue insiders and overreaching governments are always looking for weak points. Hardware wallet makers should be laser-focused on security.
Choosing a hardware wallet shouldn’t feel like gambling with private keys. It shouldn’t involve blind trust in a corporation’s ability to push updates responsibly. Users deserve more than vague reassurances. They deserve security models that put control where it belongs — with them.
Security isn’t about convenience. It’s about control. Any system that requires trusting unknown developers, opaque update processes or firmware that can be changed at will? That’s not control. That’s a liability.
The only real way to keep a hardware wallet safe? Remove the guesswork. Strip away the blind trust. Always research the developers’ backgrounds, check their track record for security incidents, and see how they’ve handled past vulnerabilities. Stick to verifiable facts — security should never be based on assumptions.
Opinion by: Igor Zemtsov, chief technology officer at TBCC.
This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.