UK Economy Contracts in July
This morning, the spotlight was on the UK GDP report. Recent UK economic indicators, such as retail sales and services sector PMI numbers, indicated a deteriorating macroeconomic environment.
The UK economy contracted by 0.5% in July versus 0.5% growth in June. Economists forecast the economy to contract by 0.2%. Significantly, the July GDP Report aligned with the BoE plans to leave interest rates unchanged.
According to the Office for National Statistics,
- All three main sectors reported contractions.
- Service sector output declined by 0.5%, the main contributor to the fall in the headline GDP number. In June, service sector output rose by just 0.2%.
- Consumer-facing services reported no growth in July versus growth of 0.5% in June.
- Manufacturing production slid by 0.8%, leaving industrial production down 0.7%.
Considering the July Labor Market Overview Report, an upward trend in unemployment would likely weigh more heavily on the service sector output. The UK services sector accounts for 80% of the UK economy, suggesting a deeper contraction in August. August service PMI numbers align with a more marked August contraction.
GBP to USD Reaction to the UK GDP Report
Before the UK GDP Report, the GBP to USD pair rose to a pre-stats high of $1.25024 before falling to a low of $1.24809.
However, in response to the GDP Report, the GBP/USD pair rose to a post-stat high of $1.24862 before sliding to a low of $1.24530.
This morning, the GBP/USD was down 0.23% to $1.24580.

Economists forecast the US annual inflation rate to accelerate from 3.2% to 3.6%. However, economists expect core inflation to soften from 4.7% to 4.3%. With the markets targeting core inflation to sway the Fed toward a hold on interest rates, the focus will remain on core inflation.
Higher-than-expected figures could reignite bets on a September Fed rate hike. This could also refuel fears of a US hard landing.


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