Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics
United Kingdom
| Jan 23 2025

U.K. Order Trends Are Still Eroding

EU order trends ‘improved’ slightly in January as the net diffusion reading rose from -40 to -34. Still, that improvement leaves orders below their 3-month, 6-month, or 12-month averages. The queue standard of January orders is in the lower 14th percentile of its historic queue of data. Obviously, it remains a historically weak reading. The order series is volatile as the chart shows. But it is still in a clear downtrend even with the uptick this month.

Export orders have approximately the same profile as for orders overall. But export orders weaken slightly in January compared to December. Export orders overall have a slightly weaker queue standing than total orders at a 13.4 percentile level.

The diffusion readings for stocks of finished goods weakened in January but even with its weaker January assessment, stocks have a firm-to-strong 72.5 percentile standing.

Looking ahead, the outlook for output volume over the next three months improved sharply from its stunning weak reading of -31 in December. However, the rise to -19 in January represents only a 4.8 percentile standing.

Unfortunately, average output prices for three months ahead has reading of +27 in January, up from +23 in December and +11 in November; the backtracking in prices expected, has brought the expectation level for the current reading to a high, 90-percentile standing. These rising inflation expectations are going to be a real problem for the Bank of England.

IP data lag the CBI survey responses. The manufacturing IP growth rate, year-on-year, has a 17.4 percentile standing as of its most recent observation in November 2024. That is also very weak. The CBI results are not giving a different message from the industrial production data, but they are timelier.

The ramp up in inflation expectation is not good new with CPI-H inflation at 3.5% year-over-year and with the core pace at 4.2%. Core inflation, sequentially, is looking stable around the 4.2% pace; for the headline, the pace has accelerated from 3.5% over 12 months to a pace of 5.4% over three months. These results, coupled with the rise in CBI expectations, are not good news for the U.K. or for the BOE.

  • 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.

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