Graeme Wearden 

UK suffers worst growth in G7; rail fare increase criticised – as it happened

UK GDP contracted by 0.3% in July-September, lagging behind other G7 countries, as UK households’ living standards fall again….. while rail fares in England to rise by nearly 6% in March
  
  

A construction worker managing traffic in the City of London in London.
A construction worker managing traffic in the City of London in London. Photograph: Tolga Akmen/EPA

Tributes to Scott Minerd are pouring in following his sudden death.

Guggenheim Partners, the US financial services firm, has announced that its global CIO, Scott Minerd, has died.

Minerd died suddenly on Wednesday afternoon, from a heart attack during his regular workout.

Mark Walter, CEO and a founder of Guggenheim Partners, says:

“I have known Scott for over 30 years and we were partners much of that time. Scott was a key innovator and thought leader who was instrumental in building Guggenheim Investments into the global business it is today.

He will be greatly missed by all. My deepest condolences are with his husband, family and loved ones.”

Minerd was a regular guest on financial TV networks such as CNBC. We’ve quoted him in this liveblog several times (including in February 2020 when he warned about the impact of the coronavirus pandemic on the US economy and the markets).

Adam Tyndall, programme director at BusinessLDN, which represents firms in the capital, says the government should focus on ending the strikes on the railways, rather than raising ticket prices.

Tyndall also calls for reforms to the current system for tickets and fares:

“Heaping additional costs onto passenger at a time when many are already feeling the cost-of-living squeeze is a misguided attempt to safeguard the financial future of the railways. With the network plagued by strikes, ministers need to focus their attention on resolving the industrial disputes that are damaging the economy.

Longer term, the railways need a real plan to return to growth and today’s announcement is a reminder that the fares and ticketing system works against that; it is not fit for purpose in a post pandemic world and fundamental reform is a priority.”

There’s little pre-Christmas cheer on Wall Street, where stocks have opened in the red.

The Dow Jones industrial average, of 30 major US companies, is down 1.35% or 447 points at 32,929.

The broaded S&P 500 index has lost 1.6%, with technology stocks falling.

Investors are trying to weigh up whether the US economy could fall into recession in 2023, or if central bankers will succeed in engineering a soft landing.

Back in the financial markets, the pound has hit its lowest level since the end of November against the US dollar.

Sterling dropped below $1.20 for the first time in three weeks, as the latest GDP reports show that the UK economy shank faster than expected in the third quarter of the year, as the US expanded more quickly than thought.

Recession fears are weighing on the pound, as Capital Economics said yesterday:

We also think the recent rally in sterling is set to reverse course as the global recession will probably strengthen the US dollar and weaken the pound.

British fashion group Superdry has secured a new loan facility of up to £80m, but it faces a higher interest rate on the arrangement.

Superdry has just issued a trading update, in which it tells shareholders it has agreed a loan facility of up to £80m, including a £30m term loan, for three years with an option to extend for one further year.

The deal, with specialist lender Bantry Bay Capital Limited, replaces an existing £70m facility which runs out at the end of January.

But, “given market conditions”, the interest rate will be higher than Superdry’s previous agreement – at 7.5% above the Sterling Overnight Interbank Average Rate (paid by banks on unsecured transactions in the British sterling market).

Superdry also reports that group revenue increased 3.6% year-on-year in the six months to 29th October.

But Julian Dunkerton, founder and CEO, warns that “consumer confidence is fragile”.

Dunkerton says:

“I’m pleased with the performance of the business over the half. It’s been well documented that conditions are extremely challenging which weren’t helped by the unseasonably warm weather in October and into November. However, by combining great product with affordable prices, we managed to grow sales in the first half. Our AW22 collection has been really well received by customers, especially our jacket range and party dresses, and it’s great to see store sales recovering well. I am also encouraged with how we have started the second half, which has seen our biggest ever week for Ecommerce orders driven by a return to record levels of jacket sales over the Black Friday period and good momentum through the recent spell of colder weather.

That said we are under no illusions that consumer confidence is fragile and that the picture is unlikely to change quickly. We are very pleased to have completed our refinancing and this, combined with the continued strengthening of our brand and product, means the business is in good shape as we trade through our important Christmas trading period.”

The UK company behind Wagamama, Chiquito, and Frankie & Benny’s has negotiated new debt terms with lenders.

The Restaurant Group told the City it has “successfully amended and extended its debt facilities”, giving itself an extra two years coverage.

Its debt package consists of a £220m loan, plus a £120m revolving credit facility (RCF) with its existing lenders.

The Restaurant Group, which runs around 420 restaurants and pub restaurants throughout the UK, says:

This represents a c. £21m early repayment of its previous facilities. TRG continues to have a strong liquidity position with over £140m of cash headroom.

This move extends the maturities of the Term Loan and the RCF to April 2028 and March 2027 respectively, it says. It also now has “additional covenant headroom” until March 2025, to avoid breaching the terms of its loans.

The company, run by former HBOS CEO Andy Hornby, has also previously purchased interest rate caps, to protect itself against interest rate changes on its debt over the next four years.

Back in September, The Restaurant Group reported a return to profit in the first half of the year – making adjusted pre-tax profits of £10.2m up from a loss of £19.9m.

But like other hospitality firms, it has also been hit by rising costs, including higher energy bills.

In May, it warned of “a volatile inflationary market” as food and drink prices climbed.

Updated

US economy stronger than previously thought in Q3

America’s third-quarter GDP report has been revised… upwards.

US GDP expanded at an annualised rate of 3.2%, the Bureau of Economic Analysis reports. That’s equivalent to a quarterly rate of 0.8%.

Previously, the increase had been estimated at 2.9%, or just over 0.7% on a q/q basis.

The data has been revised higher due to “upward revisions to consumer spending and nonresidential fixed investment” that were partly offset by a downward revision to private inventory investment, the BEA says.

That’s a contrast with the UK, which (as we learned this morning) shrank by 0.3% in Q3, more than first feared.

Here’s some early reaction, first from Liz Ann Sonders, chief investment strategist at Charles Schwab:

Labour: rail fare rise is brutal

Louise Haigh, Labour’s shadow secretary of state for transport, has condemned the decision to lift regulated fares by 5.9% next March as “a sick joke for millions reliant on crumbling services”.

The “pretty sizeable increase” in regulated rail fares next March could encourage passengers to seek roles with more opportunity for homeworking, reckons Paul Charles, CEO of travel PR agency The PC Agency

He told GB News that putting up fares in such a way will make people think “Well, I’m going to rethink what I’m spending on my travel”.

Charles says:

With technology being as it is, people now have a choice. They can work from home more, they can avoid the railways.

This at a time when the railways need substantial investment. And yet, they’re being starved of that investment.

The 5.9% increase will apply to fares regulated by the government, such as season tickets on most commuter journeys, some off-peak return tickets on long distance journeys and flexible tickets for travel around large cities.

Here’s the full story, by our transport correspondent Gwyn Topham:

Regulated rail fares in England to rise up to 5.9% in March

Regulated rail fares in England will rise by up to 5.9% next March, the Department for Transport has announced.

The rise is being capped at a level below inflation “to help reduce the impact on passengers”, the transport secretary said.

At 5.9%, the cap is 6.4 percentage points below July’s Retail Prices Index measure of inflation (which has previously been used to set fair increases). It is in line with average earnings growth that month.

The government says this is the biggest ever intervention to keep rail fares down, “due to unprecedented levels of inflation”, and will reduce the impact of high inflation for passengers.

Fares will officially rise on 5 March 2023, and will be frozen in January and February “giving passengers more time to purchase cheaper flexible and season tickets at the existing rate”.

The DoT says a rise is needed to support investment, and the financial stability of the railway.

Transport Secretary Mark Harper says:

This is the biggest ever government intervention in rail fares. I’m capping the rise well below inflation to help reduce the impact on passengers.

It has been a difficult year and the impact of inflation is being felt across the UK economy. We do not want to add to the problem.

This is a fair balance between the passengers who use our trains and the taxpayers who help pay for them.

Updated

Move to the country property trend fades as housing market loses momentum

The UK housing market has also weakened, according to property website Zoopla today.

Zoople reports that momentum in the market is falling away rapidly, with the three-month house price growth rate having more than halved to just 0.3%.

Demand for homes is down by 50% year-on-year, it reports, as buyers hold out to see what the market and economic outlook is in January.

The slowdown is focused in rural and coastal areas where prices surged in the pandemic, in the ‘race for space’ as families looked for larger properties further from major cities.

But some urban areas, such as Bradford, Swindon, Coventry, Crewe, Southend and Milton Keynes, are still recording above average demand for homes in places.

Zoopla predicts that UK house prices could fall by up to 5% in 2023, adding:

Whilst buyer interest has fallen sharply, committed buyers still remain in the market.

Nationwide Building Society has also predicted a 5% drop next year, although other economists forecast larger declines due to higher interest rates.

Hunt: High inflation is slowing growth

Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt has responded to this morning’s downgraded GDP data, pointing to the surging prices caused by the Ukraine war:

“High inflation driven by Putin’s invasion of Ukraine is slowing economic growth across the world. No country is immune, least of all Britain.

“Getting prices down so people’s wages go further is my top priority, which is why we are holding down energy bills this winter and providing extra cost of living payments for the most vulnerable.

“To get the British economy back on track, we have a plan that will help to more than halve inflation next year, while laying the foundations for long-term growth through record investment in infrastructure and new industries.”

However, as flagged earlier, other major European countries kept growing in the third quarter of this year despite the burden of higher energy prices…..

It’s difficult to see a bright side for the UK economy next year, warns Seema Shah, chief global strategist at Principal Asset Management:

Speaking at a conference hosted by Edelman Smithfield, Shah said:

“The UK government has not got a great set of options. The September mini Budget significantly undermined the credibility of the UK government, all the while inflation remains a very real and present danger.

The current strike action is part of a wider problem in the UK labour market, where the constrained labour supply suggests a more structural, sustained inflation problem.

With the economy contracting, interest rates rising and fiscal policy tightening, it is hard to see the bright side for the UK economy in 2023.”

There is some bad news in today’s GDP data which is worth noting, reports Professor Costas Milas, of the Management School at University of Liverpool:

Since the beginning of the pandemic, 4-quarter GDP growth based on “final” (or revised) data has been worse than initial (real-time) estimates when the economy was contracting.

On the other hand, final-time estimates have painted a better picture since the economy went back to positive growth in 2021. The positive ‘momentum’ based on final-time data has just been broken because final-time data for 2022Q3 indicate 4-quarter growth of 1.9% (as opposed to 2.4% based on earlier estimates).

This, in my view, is a good indication we are heading into recession.

That said, I still think the recession will be more short-lived than other economists believe (see my Comments to The Guardian, 12 December 2022).

One of the gloomiest facts in today’s GDP report is that the UK economy was 0.8% smaller than in the final quarter of 2019 (before the pandemic).

That was worse than an earlier estimate of a 0.4% shortfall, due to revisions to data covering previous quarters.

Other G7 economies, by contrast, have regained the ground lost during the pandemic, points out the Financial Times, adding:

In the three months to September, the US economy was 4.3 per cent larger than in the fourth quarter of 2019, while eurozone output was up 2.2 per cent.

It’s hard to find a silver lining in these gathering storm clouds shown in today’s UK GDP report, says Danni Hewson, AJ Bell financial analyst.

“Households struggling to find the cash they need to cover the cost of Christmas won’t really care about these revised GDP figures. They already know they’re having to cut back on the amount the buy because their cash just isn’t going as far as it used to.

“People and businesses are finding ways to curb the amount of energy they use as bills become bombs exploding confidence and undermining livelihoods.

“If there is no cash left in the kitty there’s no option of popping to the pub or nipping out for a slap-up meal you don’t have to cook yourself, and it’s these new behaviours that are marching the UK economy into recession.

“Supply issues might be easing but they’re still causing issues for some manufacturers and price pressures and skills shortages are hammering the construction sector despite healthy order books.

“Whilst this update from the ONS doesn’t really add much to what we already know about the direction of travel, there are a few nuggets that are troubling. Business investment fell by even more than had been thought and is now a whopping 8.1% below pre-Covid levels.

“Investment is the fuel that helps stoke the embers of a cooling economy and with the UK now at the bottom of the table of G7 countries when it comes to growth, it’s clear more needs to be done to inspire confidence that post-Brexit, post-pandemic the UK is worth another look.

“There is clearly a caveat in that the UK did shutter shops and close offices and factories to allow people to take time off to pay their respects to the late Queen. But all in all, it’s hard to find the silver lining in these gathering storm clouds.”

Worries over Christmas food prices jump, as rising food costs hit vulnerable

Concerns over Christmas food prices are also far higher than last year, the Office for National Statistic says.

A new report into rising food prices and the impact on consumers, just released, also shows that around half of all adults in Great Britain report buying less when food shopping.

The rising cost of pasta, bread and other everyday foods are leaving the most vulnerable the worst off, the report shows.

Staple foods, such as breads and cereals, have seen the largest price increases in the last month, increasing by 1.9% in November alone, and were up 16.6% over the last year.

The ONS reports that lower-income households are being hardest hit by rising food costs:

The most vulnerable appear to be the hardest hit, with 61% of those in the most deprived areas buying less food compared with last year, as opposed to 44% in the least deprived areas, according to our Public opinions and social trends data.

With Christmas just days away, over four in five adults (81%) reported to the Food Standards Agency (FSA) that they were concerned about the cost of food during Christmas and New Year – up from 62% in the same period last year.

Rising food prices may even have a knock-on effect on health, with nearly one-quarter (23%) of survey participants saying they skipped or reduced the size of a meal because they could not afford to buy food, according to the FSA.

UK GDP downgrade is 'bleak news'

The UK’s growth malaise is getting worse, fears James Smith, research director at Resolution Foundation.

He’s highighted several worrying points within today’s GDP report:

Investec: Risk of an earlier UK recession are now greater

Investec economist Ellie Henderson has analysed today’s revised UK GDP data, and concludes that risks of a recession have risen.

She explains:

Quarterly national accounts data released for Q3 this morning confirmed that the economy did indeed contract in the third quarter of the year, as was suggested by the first estimate of the data. Indeed, GDP contracted by 0.3%, a slightly larger fall than the -0.2% reported in the initial release.

There were also downward revisions to the back data, with every quarterly growth number back to Q3 2021 revised down by 0.1%pt. The question now is whether the economy manages to eke out growth in Q4 and avoid a recession at the end of the year. If it does escape the recession label, which still looks possible but harder owing to revisions, this would purely be in the technical sense, with weaker momentum in the UK economy still abundantly clear.

2023 looks likely to bring more difficulties, Henderson adds, with recessions likely in multiple major economies, including the UK.

But when combined with an expected decline in inflation, we believe the door will be open to cut rates in the UK towards the back end of 2023 to support the economy, helping economic momentum rebound in 2024.

Reuters’ Andy Bruce has summed up the key points from today’s UK GDP quarterly national accounts report.

Strike-hit London city pubs see sales at half pre-Covid levels

The wave of strikes across the UK in recent weeks could also hit economic growth this quarter.

Pubs and restaurants in the City of London have reported that sales were cut to almost half pre-pandemic levels during last week’s rail strikes, according to Bloomberg.

They say:

Kate Nicholls, chief executive officer of trade group UKHospitality, said takings were 46% lower in real terms than during the same week in 2019. Four days of strikes caused chaos on train services and convinced many people to work from home.

Across London as a whole, revenue was down 37% last week compared with 2019 and adjusting for inflation, Nicholls said. Hospitality businesses across the UK reported a 30% cancellation rate on bookings, as Christmas parties were called off.

Peter Marks, the chairman of nightclub operator Rekom UK, said sales were down 20% last week. The final weekend before Christmas, traditionally among the busiest, was “substantially down” due to the rail strike on Saturday.

More here.

Our UK strike calendar shows the service stoppages planned for December and January:

Updated

Three-quarters of UK firms say Brexit deal has not boosted business

More than three-quarters of firms say the government’s post-Brexit trade deal with the EU has not helped them to expand their business in the last two years despite promises that it was an “oven-ready” deal.

A survey by the British Chambers of Commerce (BCC) has prompted the business lobby group to present the government with five urgent recommendations for enhancing the agreement, which has left many exporters struggling to sell into the EU under the current terms.

More than half (56%) of the BCC members surveyed who trade with the EU said they had experienced problems complying with new rules for exporting goods, while 45% reported issues trading in services. Overall, as many as 77% of firms trading under the deal said it had not helped them to increase sales or expand.

The BCC’s director general, Shevaun Haviland, said:

“Businesses feel they are banging their heads against a brick wall as nothing has been done to help them, almost two years after the TCA [trade and cooperation agreement] was first agreed.

The longer the current problems go unchecked, the more EU traders go elsewhere, and the more damage is done.”

UK had worst growth across G7 in Q3

The UK has fallen to the bottom in the Group of Seven nations in terms of quarterly economic growth.

The 0.3% contraction in UK GDP in Q3 reported this morning is worse than Japan’s 0.2% fall in GDP, while Canada and the US both expanded pacily, by around 0.7%.

France (+0.2%), Germany (+0.4%) and Italy (+0.5%) all grew in the July-September quarter too.

Labour’s shadow chancellor, Rachel Reeves, tweets:

Updated

UK economic picture has turned gloomier

This morning’s UK Q3’s national accounts paint a gloomier economic picture, says EY ITEM Club.

Here’s their take:

  • The national accounts for Q3 showed a slightly bigger 0.3% quarter-on-quarter fall in GDP than initially estimated. The economy’s performance in Q3 wasn’t helped by another fall in household incomes and an unexpected rise in the household saving ratio. GDP growth was also revised lower in each quarter back to Q3 2021.

  • Scope for a fall in the saving ratio, alongside households’ sizeable cash holdings, will likely offer some support to activity in the near-term. However, the scale of headwinds facing the economy means the EY ITEM Club expects another fall in GDP in Q4, and for recession to persist through the first half of 2023.

The 0.3% quarter-on-quarter fall in GDP in Q3 will probably now mark the start of a recession that will see GDP shrink by 2.5% and last until Q3 2023, predicts Thomas Pugh, economist at audit, tax and consulting firm RSM UK.

He warns that weak

Admittedly, there are signs that the economy bounced back a little in Q4. GDP rose by 0.6% m/m in October and the RSM UK MMBI and the S&P Global Composite PMI both rebounded in Q4.

But the economy almost certainly worsened again in November and December as colder weather and higher inflation continued to bite.

Pugh predicts that the economy will shrink by 0.2% in Q4.

He also explains that the surge in interest rate rises hit business investment (which fell by 2.5% q/q).

Much of the domestic weakness was offset by a surge in exports of 8.9% q/q, but given the global economy is likely to fall into a recession next year, exports can’t be relied upon for much longer.

GDP data 'confirms expectations' UK heading into recession

Today’s GDP report confirms expectations that the UK economy is heading towards a recession, says Victoria Scholar, head of investment at interactive investor:

UK final Q3 GDP fell to -0.3% versus the preliminary estimate of -0.2% and expectations for -0.2%, negatively impacted by the additional bank holiday day for Queen Elizabeth’s funeral. The services sector grew by 0.1% but the production sector shrank by 2.5% with real GDP now 0.8% below its pre-pandemic levels, revised down from a previous estimate of 0.4%. Real household disposable income suffered the fourth consecutive quarter of negative growth falling 0.5% in Q3. However the household saving ratio increased to 9% versus 6.7% in the previous quarter.

The data confirms expectations that the UK economy is heading towards a recession given the downward revision to the latest quarterly GDP figure. While the service sector output was revised slightly higher, construction swung into negative territory and manufacturing was revised lower. All three sectors have been trending lower underscoring the widespread impact from the broad-based macroeconomic headwinds.

Households’ savings jumped during the quarter as a result of soaring gilt yields after the mini-budget turmoil which had an impact on pension entitlements. Consumer spending was the weakest since Q1 2021 when we were locked down during covid because of softer expenditure abroad by UK residents. The pressures from inflation, in particular rising energy bills and rent which added to cost-of-living pressures meaning less money was available for other expenditure during the quarter.

Here’s Suren Thiru, economics director at ICAEW:

Business investment contracts as economy weakened

Another worrying sign in today’s GDP report -– UK business invesment contracted by 2.5% in the third quarter of the year.

It means that business investment (on, say, new machinery or expanding a factory) is over 8% below its levels before the Covid-19 pandemic began.

The ONS says.

Gross fixed capital formation (GFCF) increased by 1.1% in Quarter 3 2022, revised down from a first estimate increase of 2.5%. The latest quarterly rise was mainly driven by a boost in government investment of 17.3%, although business investment is now estimated to have fallen by 2.5% in Quarter 3 2022.

Business investment saw notable revisions to estimates across quarters because of updated survey data.

Business investment remains 8.1% below its pre-coronavirus pandemic level.

Real household incomes contracted again

Real households’ disposable income fell by 0.5% during the third quarter of this year, as the cost of living crisis hit people, today’s GDP report shows.

That’s the fourth consecutive quarter of negative growth in RHDI, the ONS says.

Although incomes did rise, they did not keep pace with rising prices (‘real’ incomes are adjusted for inflation).

Rising housing costs (such as gas and electricity), transport, miscellaneous goods and services, and food and non-alcoholic beverages all pushed up inflation during the quarter.

The ONS explains:

Within RHDI, nominal gross disposable income rose 1.8%. With the adjustment for the change in pension entitlements not affecting the calculation of disposable income, growth in social benefits other than social transfers in kind, and wages and salaries drove nominal income growth this quarter.

However, the household expenditure implied deflator grew by 2.4%, therefore outpacing nominal income growth. This is weaker inflation growth than seen in the previous quarter as price growth on spending at restaurants and cafes as well as on UK tourist expenditure overseas eased slightly.

Introduction: UK economy shrank faster than thought in Q3

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

The UK economy shrank faster than first thought over the summer, new data shows, as the country teetered on the brink of recession.

UK GDP shrank by 0.3% in the the third quarter of 2022 (July to September), down from a first estimate of a 0.2% contraction, the Office for National Statistics reports.

Disappointingly, the ONS estimates that UK GDP was still 0.8% below its pre-coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic level, revised from the previous estimate of being 0.4% below. That means the UK is still lagging behind other G7 countries.

During the third quarter of the year, output across the production sector tumbled by 2.3% – including falls in all 13 manufacturing sub-sectors.

The services sector (the latest segment of the economy) grew by 0.1% while the construction sector shrank by 0.2% (rather than growing as previously thought).

Real household expenditure fell by a revised 1.1% in Quarter 3 2022, which was driven by declines in net tourism, transport, household goods and services, and food and drink.

ONS director of economic statistics Darren Morgan says today’s data shows the economy performed “slightly less well” than previously thought:

The bank holiday for the State Funeral of Queen Elizabeth II in September also hit growth in Q3 – leading to a bounceback in October.

Many economists predict the UK will shrink in the fourth quarter of 2022, which would be a technical recession, and struggle in 2023 too.

John Leiper, chief investment officer at Titan Asset Management says today’s ‘dour’ figures set the scene for the looming 2023 recession:

UK GDP declined meaningfully in the third quarter, down -0.3%. That’s worse than expected and brings the annual number to just 1.9% from 2.4% prior. That is the lowest reading since June 2021 following a sharp rebound in activity coming out of the Covid slump. It is concerning, albeit not too surprising, to see household consumption and total business investment declined meaningfully as the economic environment continues to sour.

This sets the scene for a dour 2023 and is consistent with our expectations for a recession next year.

The agenda

  • 9.30am GMT: UK report into “Rising food prices and the impact on consumers”

  • 1.30pm GMT: US weekly jobless figures

  • 1.30pm GMT: US Q3 GDP report (final estimate)

 

Leave a Comment

Required fields are marked *

*

*