UK economy continues to stagnate, confounding forecast of growth – business live | Business

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UK GDP contributors Photograph: ONS

Bloomberg’s political editor Alex Wickham said on X:

NEW: The UK economy unexpectedly stagnated for a second month in July, suggesting that a rapid recovery from recession is now losing momentum

GDP unchanged after flatlining in June too

Economists had forecast a 0.2% increase

Via @tomelleryrees @PhilAldrick @irinaanghel12

— Alex Wickham (@alexwickham) September 11, 2024

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Services activity picked up by 0.1% following a 0.1% dip in June, but did not show the expected strong pick-up while industrial production declined by 0.8%.

Construction output was down by 0.4% in July.

Services grew by 0.6% in the three months to July. There was also a 1.2% increase in construction output, while production dipped by 0.1% over this period.

UK GDP Photograph: ONS

Professional, scientific and technical activities was the largest positive contributor to the rise in services output over the three month-period, up by 2%. The next largest contribution came from wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles, where output increased by 0.7%.

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UK economy continues to stagnate in July

The UK economy continued to flatline in July, but grew by 0.5% in the three months to July, according to the latest official figures.

Economists had expected GDP to rise by 0.2% in July. In June, there was also zero growth.

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The yen also got a boost from Bank of Japan board member Junko Nakagawa, who reiterated in a speech that the central bank would continue to raise interest rates if inflation and the wider the economy move in line with its forecasts.

The dollar dropped as much as 1.2% to 140.71 yen, a level not seen since 28 December before recovering slightly.

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Economists at Daiwa Capital Markets said:

After economic output moved sideways in June, we expect a return to expansion in July with growth of 0.3% month on month, which would leave the three-month growth rate unchanged at a solid 0.6%. Growth will in part reflect the pickup in retail sales of 0.5% that month, when a long-awaited improvement in the weather boosted demand.

Surveys also pointed to growth across the services sector as well as construction, while the manufacturing output PMI rose to the highest level in more than two years. So, although factory production grew in June by the most in four months, we expect the expansion in GDP in July to be broad-based.

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Introduction: UK economy forecast to have returned to growth in July

Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.

The UK economy is expected to have returned to growth in July, after flatlining in June.

The latest GDP figures from the Office for National Statistics, out at 7am, are expected to show that the economy expanded by 0.2% in July, after zero growth in June.

Deutsche Bank economist Sanjay Raja, who is predicting a 0.3% rise in GDP in July, said:

What’s driving the increase in output? Mainly, a stronger rebound in services activity, led by a pick up in retail and leisure services. Industrial production output also likely expanded to start the third quarter, lifted in large part by an increase in oil production, and to a slightly lesser extent, manufacturing output. Last but not least, we expect the construction sector to see its third monthly consecutive rise (0.2% month on month).

Where are risks to our nowcast skewed? To the downside, with our modelled estimates having a downward skew relative to our point estimate.

Looking ahead, we continue to see GDP expanding at a steady clip, averaging roughly 0.4% quarter on quarter in the second half. It’s early days, but risks to our quarterly nowcasts are skewed to the upside, raising upside risks to our annual growth projection too.

We are also getting figures for trade and industrial production at the same time.

It’s also US inflation day. The annual headline rate is expected to have fallen to 2.6% from 2.9%, while the core rate, which strips out volatile food and energy costs, is set to have stayed at 3.2%.

Investec economist Ryan Djajasaputra said:

July’s outturn provided further reassurance that inflation remains on a disinflationary path, with the 2.9% print being the first below 3% since March 2021. Early consensus estimates are for a further moderation to 2.6%.

Also today:

The British steel industry is braced for 2,500 job cuts at the Port Talbot steelworks, with thousands more jobs at risk in the UK, as the government prepares a taxpayer-backed deal for the south Wales plant.

The business secretary, Jonathan Reynolds, is expected to outline this morning the details of a rescue deal which will see the government hand the historic Welsh plant’s owners, Tata Steel, £500m to build a new electric furnace – but at the cost of huge redundancies from the closure of its last remaining blast furnace.

Natarajan Chandrasekaran, the chair of Tata Group, told the Financial Times on Tuesday that talks were “going well” and it was “very close” to agreeing a deal.

It is understood the government, which previously promised to “push for job guarantees”, has been unable to protect these jobs, with 2,500 still expected to go in the coming months.

The Agenda

  • 7am BST: UK GDP for July (forecast: 0.2%, previous: 0%)

  • 7am BST: UK trade, industrial production for July

  • 1.30pm BST: US inflation for August (forecast: 2.6%, previous: 2.9%)

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