Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics

Economy in Brief

  • United Kingdom
    | May 12 2023

    UK Growth Up Modestly in Q1

    The UK economy grew by 0.1% in the three months to March 2023, matching market expectations. On a monthly basis, GDP fell by 0.3%, after showing no growth in February. The contraction in output in March was mainly driven by a weaker services sector, the output of which declined by 0.5% after a fall of 0.1% in February. In particular, output in the wholesale trade and retail sector fell by 1.4% thanks to much weaker household spending in response to rising inflation. Output in consumer-facing services fell by 0.8% in March 2023 after a rise of 0.4% in February.

    In contrast, growth trends in other key component sectors such as production and construction were more upbeat. Specifically, industrial production grew by 0.7% in March which was the strongest pace of growth since May 2021. Construction sector output also grew by 0.2% in March following growth of 2.6% in February.

    Despite the increase in output in Q1, GDP is still some 0.5% below its pre-pandemic level. Still, the economy has now eked out two consecutive quarters of growth, which chimes with the Bank of England’s revised view that the UK may now avoid a recession in 2023.

  • Following a frenetic week on both the policy and data front, the macroeconomic calendar has been a little lighter over the past few days. This week’s key report, namely April’s US CPI data, more or less met market expectations while on the policy front the Bank of England matched forecasts too in hiking the Bank rate by 25bps. Otherwise the stability of the US banking sector and debt ceiling politics were a couple of themes for investors to additionally focus on. Against this backdrop, our charts this week home in on the latest Blue Chip consensus for economic growth (in chart 1) and how these contrast with recent investor surveys of the world economy (in chart 2). We then look at how the wheels of the US credit cycle are slowing down according to the latest Senior Loan Officer survey (in chart 3) and how the small company sector is responding to this via reduced expectations for inflation (in chart 4). Finally, we look at China’s reopening and the weaker momentum that’s being signalled by high frequency economic indicators (in chart 5) together with the absence of any big ripple effects from that reopening for the rest of the world (in chart 6).

    • Annual increase remains at two-year low.
    • Core goods & services prices rise.
    • Food prices decline; energy costs recover.
    • Initial claims up 22,000 in latest week
    • Continuing claims rise slightly but still lower than early April
    • Insured unemployment rate steady
  • Japan's economy watchers index improved in April to 54.6 from 53.3 in March. March had improved to 53.3 from 52.0. The index has been increasing steadily over 12 months. It is higher by 5.1 points over 12 months, by 3.8 points over 6 months and by 6.1 points over 3 months. A lot of improvement has come in the last few months.

    In April, all the diffusion readings in the economy watchers current index are above 50, indicating expansion for the category, with two exceptions: housing and manufacturers. Housing has a 46.1 diffusion reading and has been below 50 for several months running. The manufacturing index has been vacillating, but the April value of 49.6 shows only a very slight contraction in progress in manufacturing.

    To evaluate these diffusion indexes by seeing where they stand relative to historic data, refer to the queue standing column at the far-right hand portion of the table. Among the ten entries under the current index, six have queue percentile standing in the top 10% of values since April 2002. All readings stand above the 50th percentile signaling that all are above their historic medians for this period. Among the headline and the nine components, the headline and seven components show increases on all horizons: over 12 months, over 6 months and over 3 months.

    The future readings for the economy watchers index also show steady increases with the 55.7 diffusion index in April, better than its 54.1 diffusion reading in March which exceeds the 50.8 reading for February. The future headline also shows gains over all three horizons: over 3 months, over 6 months and over 12 months. Like the current index, all the percentile queue standings for the future index are above the 50th percentile mark - all categories are above their historic medians. In addition, the headline and six components have standings in their top ten percentile.

    The raw diffusion readings for April in the future index show only housing below 50 in its diffusion value. And like with the current index, housing has a string of sub-50 diffusion readings. However, its queue standing remains above its 50th percentile on data back to 2002.

    Not only is the current assessment quite upbeat but so is the outlook assessment from the future index.

    • Core goods price strength is spotty.
    • Services prices move higher.
    • Energy prices decline; food prices remain strong.
    • Revenues decline with lower personal tax receipts.
    • Outlays surge for Social Security, Defense & Interest.
    • Mortgage applications rose, pushed by refi activity.
    • Effective interest rates decrease slightly for all major types of mortgages.
    • Average loan size increases, also reflecting advance in refi loans.