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Bad news day for the British...........

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  • Bad news day for the British...........

    Recovery hopes dashed by weak manufacturing

    Recovery hopes have been dealt another blow by January data for the production industries, including manufacturing, that showed output shrank far more sharply than expected.

    The current Mini hatchback is built at Mini Plant Oxford









    By Philip Aldrick, Economics Editor

    9:55AM GMT 12 Mar 2013

    Comment


    A slight improvement in the balance of trade for the month, published in a separate relief, provided little solace following the 1.2pc decline in industrial production between December and January, according to the Office for National Statistics. Economists had expected expansion of 0.1pc.


    Although the decline was once again caused largely by North Sea oil platform shutdowns, the UK’s manufacturing sector also disappointed. Following a 1.6pc increase in December, the sector – which remains the country’s largest single industry – declined by 1.5pc.


    The figures will rekindle fears of a triple dip recession, folloqwing the 0.3pc GDP contraction in the final three months of last year.


    The trade figures were a little better than hoped, with the deficit in goods and services in January shrinking slightly from £2.8bn in December to £2.4bn in January. The goods deficit, which some had feared would expand from £8.9bn to £9bn, shrank to £8.2bn.


    The improvement was not driven by an increase in exports over the latest three months, but by a 2pc decline in imports.

  • #2
    Re: Bad news day for the British...........

    Ah................MORE!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Economic woes push up cost of insuring UK debt

    Anxiety that Britain's economy will slide back into recession is hurting confidence in the country's debt and pushing up the cost of insuring gilts, according to Bloomberg data.

    Sterling has also been hit by fears that monetary policy could be loosened to help spur growth. Photo: PA









    By Rachel Cooper, and agencies

    8:52AM GMT 12 Mar 2013

    2 Comments


    Credit-default swaps insuring gilts have risen 76pc from a four-year low in November of 26 basis points. That marked the biggest rise among 67 governments tracked by Bloomberg.


    It is now more expensive to insure UK debt than that of countries including Finland, Denmark, Germany and Austria, with rising swap prices signalling a deterioration in investor sentiment.


    Just last year, Britain's debt was considered safest among the biggest European borrowers amid concern the eurozone would fracture and the cost to Germany of supporting weaker members would surge.


    However, swaps insuring Britain's debt now cost 10 basis points more than contracts on German bunds, according to Bloomberg.

    Perceptions of risk began to change after the European Central Bank moved to protect the currency union, including a pledge to buy bonds of member nations that needed help.

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    Moody's decision last month to strip Britain of its treasured triple-A credit rating has also dragged on sentiment.
    “At a time when the world has become slightly more comfortable with Europe as a whole, the UK has moved in the opposite direction and its safe-haven status has been challenged,” Arif Husain of AllianceBernstein told Bloomberg.
    “The downgrade is a reflection of all the other factors, the biggest being low and slow growth.”

    However, Padhraic Garvey of ING pointed out that Britain's debt is still considered safer than most of Europe because the country has its own currency.
    Sterling has also been hit by concerns over the rating downgrade and fears that monetary policy could be loosened to help spur growth.

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