UK economy returns to growth in November, with 0.3% rise in GDP – business live
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Newsflash: The UK economy returned to growth in November, with GDP expanding by 0.3%.
That’s slightly stronger than the 0.2% growth which City economists expected.
It follows the 0.3% contraction in October.
The Office for National Statistics reports that the UK’s services sector provided the bulk of the growth in November.
Here’s the details:
Services output grew by 0.4% in November 2023 and was the main contributor to the monthly growth in GDP; this follows a fall of 0.1% in October 2023 (revised up from a 0.2% fall).
Production output grew by 0.3% in November 2023, following a fall of 1.3% in October (revised down from a 0.8% fall).
The construction sector fell by 0.2% in November 2023 after a fall of 0.4% in October 2023 (revised up from a 0.5% fall).
Here’s ONS chief economist Grant Fitzner on this morning’s GDP report:
“The economy contracted a little over the three months to November, with widespread falls across manufacturing industries, which were partially offset by increases in public services, which saw less impact from strike action.
GDP bounced back in the month of November, however, led by services with retail, car leasing and computer games companies all having a buoyant month.
The longer-term picture remains one of an economy that has shown little growth over the last year.”
Despite the pick-up in growth in November, the UK economy shrank in the three months from September to November.
GDP in the three months to November fell by 0.2%, compared with the three months to August 2023.
Services showed no growth, production output fell by 1.5% and construction fell by 0.6% over the period, the Office for National Statistics reports.
GDP fell 0.2% in the three months to November 2023.
Services was flat (0.0%), while production was down 1.5% and construction down 0.6%
Newsflash: The UK economy returned to growth in November, with GDP expanding by 0.3%.
That’s slightly stronger than the 0.2% growth which City economists expected.
It follows the 0.3% contraction in October.
The Office for National Statistics reports that the UK’s services sector provided the bulk of the growth in November.
Here’s the details:
Services output grew by 0.4% in November 2023 and was the main contributor to the monthly growth in GDP; this follows a fall of 0.1% in October 2023 (revised up from a 0.2% fall).
Production output grew by 0.3% in November 2023, following a fall of 1.3% in October (revised down from a 0.8% fall).
The construction sector fell by 0.2% in November 2023 after a fall of 0.4% in October 2023 (revised up from a 0.5% fall).
Delays to deliveries to components due to the attacks on ships in the Red Sea will force Tesla to suspend most car production at its factory near Berlin for two weeks, Reuters reports.
The partial production stop will run from 29 January to 11 February, and highlights the risks that rising geopolitical tensions pose to the economy.
Reuters explains:
The partial production stop is evidence that the crisis in the Red Sea, unleashed by Iranian-backed Houthi militants attacking vessels in solidarity with Palestinian Islamist group Hamas fighting Israel in Gaza, has hit Europe’s largest economy.
The U.S. electric vehicle maker is the first company to disclose an interruption to output due to the disruption. Many companies including Geely, China’s second-largest automaker by sales, and Swedish home furnishing company Ikea have warned of delays to deliveries.
“The armed conflicts in the Red Sea and the associated shifts in transport routes between Europe and Asia via the Cape of Good Hope are also having an impact on production in Gruenheide,” Tesla said in a statement.
The UK’s services sector could help the country avoid falling into recession at the end of last year, suggets MichaelHewson of CMCMarkets:
Today’s November numbers are unlikely to be anywhere near as poor [as October, when GDP fell 0.3%] and should see a modest rebound of 0.2%, with the index of services expected to drive the improvement with a strong rebound from their decline in October.
We already know from recent services PMI numbers that the UK economy appeared to rebound strongly in the final 2-months of 2023, which in turn could see the economy avoid a technical recession after the -0.1% contraction in Q3.
November is also expected to see an improvement in industrial and manufacturing production of 0.3% after the sharp declines in October.
The UK economy “likely rebounded in November”, predicts SanjayRaja, DeutscheBank’s chief UK economist.
He told clients this week:
Indeed, many of the factors driving the drop in output over October looked temporary. Survey data also pointed to a mild bounce back in activity. And our nowcast models point to a rebound in GDP.
What do we expect? We expect a 0.2% month-on-month expansion in GDP. Services activity, we think, will have jumped by 0.2% m-o-m, with industrial production up 0.4% m-o-m, and construction output rising by 0.1% m-o-m. Risks to our projection are skewed to the upside.
However, Deutsche has also lowered its forecast for 2023 GDP growth to 0.3%.
And it expects a “a bumpy start” to 2024, with strike activity dragging output in January.
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New GDP data will show how the UK economy performed in November, as it flirts with a technical recession.
Economists predict the economy returned to growth in November, with GDP expected to have risen by 0.2%.
That would be a welcome pick-up, after GDP fell by 0.3% in October, and also shrank in July-September, which put Britain on the brink of a recession.
Matthew Ryan, head of market strategy at global financial services firm Ebury, says:
We expect a modest rebound in activity that should allay fears of a Q4 recession.
But, the broader picture may be that the UK economy is stuck in neutral gear, wavering between stagnation and a minor contraction.
Bloomberg says:
It’s a bleak backdrop for Prime Minister Rishi Sunak to fight the next election, though there is some prospect of an improvement later this year.
The financial markets are on edge after US and UK forces launched air and missile strikes in Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen overnight.
The oil price has jumped 2%, up $1.5 to around $79 per barrel.
Houthi attacks have already disrupted shipping in the region (as we covered yesterday), pushing up container costs and leading to longer delays as vessels avoid the Red Sea and reroute their journeys.