U.K. GfK Confidence Index Gives Back Gains
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The U.K. confidence measure from GfK slipped to -30 in July from -24 in June; the index had been rising from its depths after reaching a second low following a post-Covid revival in the index that did not last. In September 2022, the index fell to a reading of -49 carving out a new low in this cycle below the immediate post-Covid low.
In July, the current household financial situation backed off, falling to a reading of 19 from 22 and is back to its May level. The only component improving on the month is present savings that ticked up to 26 in July from 25 in June.
The last 12-months Compared to the last 12-months, the household financial situation deteriorated in July to a -20 reading as it fell from -15 in June. The general economic situation fell to -58 from -54. Although the reading on the CPI backed down to 118 in July from 123 in June even though inflation in the U.K. continues to run quite hot. Comparisons to conditions over the previous 12 months nonetheless for two of three metrics deteriorated except for inflation where participants saw some improvement despite what has been dismal incoming inflation news.
12-months ahead Looking ahead to the next 12 months, the household financial situation is expected to be worse, falling to -7 in July compared to -1 in June, but this is still slightly better than May’s -8 reading. The general economic situation is assessed to be worse at a -33 level in July compared to -25 a month ago; this setback interrupts a previous improving trend. Unemployment is seen lower at a reading of 25 in July compared to 30 a month ago. Savings are projected to be weaker; the survey response falls to 16 from 20 but is stronger than the two previous months’ results. And the CPI expected for 12-months ahead shows a small improvement to 76 in July from 78 in June and that compares to 83 in May. However, so far, improvement on the inflation front has been elusive.
By income group By income class, lower income people see a worsening in July compared to what they saw in June; the just survey response fell to -43 from -41 although that's an improvement from May at -47 and April at -50. For upper income persons, the outlook worsened more sharply in July at a -9 compared to a +4 in June and zero in May.
Rankings are generally low The rankings for these metrics show only four responses above the historic medians; we've ranked the data over the last 20 years, a reading of 50% on the queue assessment puts an indicator at its median for the period. On this basis, only present savings, future savings and the CPI compared to the last 12- months and the CPI compared to the next 12-months show standings above the 50th percentile mark. The high rankings for inflation are not reassuring. Overall consumer confidence has a 16.5 percentile standing with the current household financial situation at a 37.7 percentile standing and the household financial situation for 12-months ahead having a 22.9 percentile standing - some improvement on a rank-standing basis, but not much. The general economic situation has a 22-percentile standing over the last 12-months. Looking ahead to the next 12-months, it has a nearly identical 21.6 percentile standing. Both are quite weak. Unemployment prospects have a 44.9 percentile standing putting them below their historic median; in this case, a rating below the median is better than one above it. On the other hand, it's not below the median by that much as it's a 44.9 percentile standing.
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Summing up The U.K. economy continues to struggle with growth and the Bank of England's rate hikes so far have not had much impact on inflation. The U.K. is in much the same situation as the Federal Reserve in the United States where there have been been a number of rate hikes, but they haven't yet reached the critical value to be effective. Yet, rates have been moving up for a long-enough period that people are disappointed that the success in rate hiking hasn't been greater. U.K. remains in the difficult spot, but the European economy, across the channel, also is struggling with growth, and struggling with high inflation, and the war between Ukraine and Russia is a continuing black spot on the horizon.
Robert Brusca
AuthorMore in Author Profile »Robert A. Brusca is Chief Economist of Fact and Opinion Economics, a consulting firm he founded in Manhattan. He has been an economist on Wall Street for over 25 years. He has visited central banking and large institutional clients in over 30 countries in his career as an economist. Mr. Brusca was a Divisional Research Chief at the Federal Reserve Bank of NY (Chief of the International Financial markets Division), a Fed Watcher at Irving Trust and Chief Economist at Nikko Securities International. He is widely quoted and appears in various media. Mr. Brusca holds an MA and Ph.D. in economics from Michigan State University and a BA in Economics from the University of Michigan. His research pursues his strong interests in non aligned policy economics as well as international economics. FAO Economics’ research targets investors to assist them in making better investment decisions in stocks, bonds and in a variety of international assets. The company does not manage money and has no conflicts in giving economic advice.