The UK’s economic outlook appeared rather bleak yesterday for a lack of market-moving economic data, forcing economists to ponder whether rising interest rates will be able to control inflation and avoid a recession.
In the corporate world, bosses are “hesitant to hire” according to a survey from KPMG which found that 43% of 400 recruitment agencies saw a decline in permanent hires in July.
“The latest survey results reflect the current summer weather – damp, but with some possible bright skies on the horizon,” said Claire Warnes, of KPMG.
UK house prices fell for the fourth month in a row in July with the average price falling 0.3% Halifax’s index showed. Putting that into context, the cost of the average UK home is now 2.4% lower than it was a year ago, a timeframe that has seen UK interest rates rise from 1.25% to 5.25%.
The S&P 500 started to stabilize yesterday, adding 0.7%. This follows its worst week in five months as the index lost 2.27% last week. It’s believed this pullback was driven by Finch’s downgrading of the US government’s credit rating.
Amid the growing concern about the role of the shadow banking system, the Bank of England has recruited over 50 London banking institutions to take part in the first-ever stress tests, involving the shadow banking sector. They will measure the ways that banks and non-bank financial institutions react to a hypothetical economic shock and would therefore affect financial stability.
Today is quiet on the data front. We’ve already received Germany’s July inflation rate which fell from 6.4% to 6.2% (year-on-year). France’s trade deficit narrowed to 6.7 billion in June, the lowest level since August 2021 and below market expectations of a €8.1 billion contraction.
There are two scheduled speeches this afternoon from the Federal Reserve, which may shed light on the Bank’s monetary policy ahead of inflation figures, which are due to be released on Thursday.
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