Pantheon Macroeconomics

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UK Publications

Below is a list of our UK Publications for the last 6 months. If you are looking for reports older than 6 months please email info@pantheonmacro.com, or contact your account rep

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Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)

4 November 2024 UK Monitor Forecast review: A stronger Budget outweighs weaker data for the MPC

  • We cut our forecast for Q3 GDP growth to 0.2% from 0.3% previously, 0.1pp below the MPC’s forecast.
  • Ms. Reeves’ Budget will keep the MPC from easing at back-to-back meetings this year.
  • We expect four 25bp cuts from rate-setters in 2025, at a pace of one per quarter.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

UK Datanote: UK Money & Credit, September 2024

  • In one line: Expectations of further rate cuts continue to lift the housing market and corporate borrowing.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

October 2024 - UK Chartbook

SLOWLY EASING INFLATION AND A LOOSER BUDGET...

  • …THE MPC WILL CUT RATES ONCE PER QUARTER

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

UK Datanote: UK GfK Consumers' Confidence Survey, October 2024

  • In one line: Consumers’ confidence falls on Budget, clarity on October 30 will help sentiment recover.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

28 October 2024 UK Monitor Public sector net financial liabilities a fair target; gilts will be fine

  • Rachel Reeves’ loosening of fiscal rules will likely mean £24B per year more borrowing for investment.
  • Markets will likely still see the new fiscal rules as credible, avoiding a ‘Liz Truss’ moment...
  • ...as Chancellor Reeves’ focus on the current budget deficit shows commitment to sustainable policy.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

25 October 2024 UK Monitor Slowing PMI means consecutive rate cuts are on the table

  • The composite PMI fell to an 11-month low, as Budget uncertainty hit firms.
  • The forward-looking balances suggest that the PMI will rebound in November.
  • The PMI indicates that inflation is stubborn and firms expanded margins more quickly in October.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

24 October 2024 UK Monitor Interest rate cuts will boost business investment

  • UK business investment has flatlined for eight years, but an upturn seems to be underway.
  • Firms are borrowing again as interest rates fall, and CFOs report the cost of credit is easing.
  • Investment intentions signal 2.9% capex growth year-over-year in Q3. 

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

UK Datanote: UK Public Finances, September 2024

  • In one line:Government borrowing overshoots OBR forecast again, Ms. Reeves will raise planned taxes, spending and borrowing in her October 30 budget.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

22 October 2024 UK Monitor Gilt yields will react little to likely change to fiscal rules

  • We expect the Chancellor to raise government investment by £24B in 2028/29 in the Budget.
  • Ms. Reeves will change the fiscal rules to allow more borrowing to fund the extra investment.
  • We expect the Chancellor to target public sector net liabilities falling relative to GDP.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

UK Datanote: Retail Sales, September 2024

  • In one line:Retail sales defy the rain to rise in September. 

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

21 October 2024 UK Monitor So much for Budget uncertainty weighing on consumers

  • Surprisingly strong retail sales in September suggest consumers are shrugging off Budget uncertainty.
  • Weather and unfavourable seasonals hit September sales, so the trend is better than the headlines.
  • Real wage growth and interest rate cuts will help consumer spending support GDP growth in H2.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

18 October 2024 UK Monitor Budget will be stimulatory, despite large tax increases

  • The October 30 Budget will likely boost government spending more than taxes, raising growth.
  • Tax hikes will pay for day-to-day spending, while Ms. Reeves will tweak her fiscal rule to boost investment.
  • Markets will be unruffled, so gilt yields could fall as any additional sovereign risk premium unwinds.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

UK Datanote: U.K. Official House Price Index, August

  • In one line: House prices rebound strongly in August as rate cuts feed through.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

UK Datanote: U.K. Consumer Prices, September 2024

  • In one line: Volatile air fares cut CPI services inflation and will rebound, but Governor Bailey will now look for “aggressive" cut.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

UK Datanote: UK Labour Market Data, August / September 2024

  • In one line: Slowing wages make a November rate cut a slam dunk as the MPC will ignore dodgy job data.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

UK Datanote: UK Labour Market Data, August / September 2024

  • In one line: Slowing wages make a November rate cut a slam dunk as the MPC will ignore dodgy job data.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

17 October 2024 UK Monitor Inflation brings Governor Bailey's "aggressive" rate cuts into view

  • The decline in CPI inflation in September likely leaves Governor Bailey primed for “aggressive” rate cuts.
  • But the fall in services inflation was exaggerated by volatile airfares; the MPC likely will look through this.
  • We still expect the MPC to cut rates quarterly, but a consecutive cut in December is a close call now.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

16 October 2024 UK Monitor Unreliable labour-market data make the MPC's job harder

  • The official labour-market data tell a comforting story of improving labour supply and falling wage growth.
  • But the LFS data are too unreliable to take seriously, and AWE seems to exaggerate the slowdown in pay.
  • The MPC has enough to cut rates in November, but the data fog will restrict easing to once per quarter.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

15 October 2024 UK Monitor A stimulatory Budget will keep the MPC cutting only quarterly

  • We expect a stimulatory Budget from Chancellor Rachel Reeves on October 30.
  • A growth-boosting Budget should limit the MPC to cutting interest rates only once per quarter.
  • Markets will be unruffled by a modest change to Ms. Reeves’ fiscal rules, so gilt yields could fall.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

UK Datanote: UK International Trade, August 2024

  • In one line: The headline trade deficit narrows because of erratics and metals.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

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