Wednesday 3 October 2012

Sterling struggles as UK growth runs out of steam at end of Q3


After an excellent few weeks in which UK figures repeatedly beat expectations to the upside, this week’s figure reveal that UK growth slowed up in September, which represents a disappointing conclusion to the third quarter. All three of the monthly updates from the UK manufacturing, construction and services sectors came in softer than consensus expectations, which is likely to bring the UK government firmly back down to earth.

The Chief Economist of Markit, the company which compiles the PMI data that we are talking about, has suggested today that UK GDP will only grow by 0.1% in the third quarter, which is well below our and the market’s expectations. Before this week, we were roughly in line with consensus expectations of a GDP showing of 0.6%. Clearly this week’s figures cannot be ignored but a downward revision to 0.1% is a little too drastic for us. We are still anticipating growth close to the 0.5% mark. The August Inflation Report from the BoE, which anticipated growth of as much as 1.0% in Q3, is likely to be well wide of the mark.

Although today’s services data suggests that the steady and impressive improvements we have been seeing in the UK labour market may be coming to an end, the order books are at least looking pretty healthy. Still, the figures do firmly indicate that the strength in the UK economy seen in August was down to temporary Olympics-related demand. Underlying growth appears to be significantly weaker.

Many market players will naturally respond by speculating that the Bank of England will react with another round of QE. Thursday will not produce a QE decision, though November’s BoE meeting is likely garner far more debate from within the MPC. Much will depend on the Q3 preliminary GDP reading at the end of the month.

Richard Driver

Currency Analyst

Caxton FX