UK GDP Growth Confirmed At 0.1%

RTTNews | il y a 785
UK GDP Growth Confirmed At 0.1%

(RTTNews) - The UK economy expanded modestly in the first quarter, as initially estimated, underpinned by services and production, revised data from the Office for National Statistics showed on Friday.

Gross domestic product registered a sequential growth of 0.1 percent in the first quarter. The preliminary estimate was thus left unchanged and also matched the fourth quarter's expansion. Still, the level of quarterly GDP was 0.5 percent below its pre-pandemic level.

Data confirmed that the UK economy steered clear of a recession at the start of the year, Capital Economics economist Ashley Webb said.

However, with around 60 percent of the drag from higher interest rates yet to be felt, the economy is likely to tip into one in the second half of this year involving a peak-to-trough fall in real GDP of around 0.5 percent, the economist added.

In output terms, the services sector expanded 0.1 percent, unrevised from the previous estimate. The increase was driven by information and communications and, administrative and support service activities. Industrial production also grew 0.1 percent, which was same as the first estimate. This followed nil growth in the fourth quarter.

Within production, manufacturing gained 0.6 percent, which was revised up from 0.5 percent. By contrast, mining and quarrying output declined 5.4 percent.

Meanwhile, growth in construction sector was revised down to 0.4 percent from 0.7 percent. The improvement was underpinned by repair and maintenance.

The expenditure-side of GDP showed that there was no change in household spending in the first quarter. This followed a 0.2 percent growth in the preceding quarter, as real household incomes continued to be squeezed by high inflation.

The increase in gross fixed capital formation was revised to 2.4 percent from 1.3 percent. The revision reflects an upward revision in business investment, which climbed 3.3 percent. The improvement in gross fixed capital formation was partially offset by a 1.8 percent decline in government consumption. The drop was revised from the initially estimated 2.5 percent fall.

There was a decrease in the volume of net trade in the first quarter. Data showed that trade deficit for goods and services was 2.0 percent of nominal GDP, revised down from the first estimate deficit of 1.4 percent.

Another report from the ONS showed that the underlying current account deficit, excluding previous metals, narrowed to GBP 17.0 billion from GBP 21.1 billion a quarter ago.

read more
UK Inflation Hits 18-Month High

UK Inflation Hits 18-Month High

UK consumer price inflation accelerated to an 18-month high in July on airfares and food prices, suggesting that the Bank of England is likely to delay further easing. The consumer price index posted an annual growth of 3.8 percent after rising 3.6 percent in June, the Office for National Statistics reported Wednesday.
RTTNews | il y a 3
UK GDP Rises More Than Expected

UK GDP Rises More Than Expected

The UK economy expanded more than expected in the second quarter but the overall growth softened as US frontloading propelled growth at the start of the year. Gross domestic product expanded 0.3 percent in the second quarter largely driven by growth in the service sector, the Office for National Statistics reported Thursday. Although the rate was stronger than the expected growth of 0.1 pe
RTTNews | il y a 8
UK Labor Market Cools In Q2

UK Labor Market Cools In Q2

The U.K. labor market softened in the second quarter as wage growth eased, the unemployment rate held steady at a four-year high and job vacancies continued to decline sharply, official data revealed on Tuesday. The ILO jobless rate held steady at 4.7 percent in the second quarter, figures from the Office for National Statistics revealed and was in line with expectations.
RTTNews | il y a 10
UK Job Placements Decline Sharply On Weaker Confidence & Budget Pressures

UK Job Placements Decline Sharply On Weaker Confidence & Budget Pressures

UK job placements logged a steep decline in July due to weaker confidence around the economic outlook and rising employment costs, monthly data from S&P Global showed Monday. Permanent staff appointments declined sharply in July and temp billings registered its biggest fall in five months, the KPMG/REC Report on Jobs said.
RTTNews | il y a 12
Bank Of England Cuts Rate In Tight Vote

Bank Of England Cuts Rate In Tight Vote

The Bank of England reduced its benchmark interest rate in a close call on Thursday suggesting that the monetary easing cycle is nearing an end as policymakers became more concerned about persistent inflation. The Monetary Policy Committee, headed by BoE Governor Andrew Bailey, voted 5-4 to cut the bank rate by 25 basis points to 4.00 percent.
RTTNews | il y a 15
UK House Prices Rise At Fastest Pace In 6 Months

UK House Prices Rise At Fastest Pace In 6 Months

UK house prices grew at the fastest pace in six months in July as the property market started to stabilize following the end of the stamp duty holiday, data from the mortgage lender Halifax showed on Thursday. House prices increased by more-than-expected 0.4 percent in July from June. Prices were expected to grow at a steady pace of 0.1 percent in July. Moreover, this was the fastest growth sinc
RTTNews | il y a 16
Downturn In UK Construction Activity Deepens

Downturn In UK Construction Activity Deepens

The UK construction sector downturn deepened in July as volumes of work carried out across all sectors decreased markedly, survey results from S&P Global showed on Wednesday. The headline construction Purchasing Managers' Index fell to 44.3 in July from 48.8 in June. The score signaled the sharpest contraction since May 2020.
RTTNews | il y a 17
UK House Price Growth Accelerates In July

UK House Price Growth Accelerates In July

UK house prices grew at a faster pace in July reflecting steadily improving housing affordability and moderate fall in mortgage rates, Nationwide Building Society said on Friday. House prices increased 2.4 percent on a yearly basis in July, following June's 2.1 percent increase. Prices were expected to climb at a steady pace of 2.1 percent in July.
RTTNews | il y a 22