UK consumers frugal, wary of future
LONDON, July 29 (Reuters) -
Britons remain reluctant to borrow and consumer confidence fell back in July towards an earlier two-year low, data showed on Friday, fuelling concerns that weak consumer spending will continue to hamper a fragile economic recovery.The Bank of England said total lending to individuals rose by 0.4 billion pounds last month, compared to a 1.4 billion pound growth in May, as net mortgage lending fell by 0.1 billion pounds, confounding forecasts of a 1 billion pound rise.
Consumer credit increased by 0.4 billion pounds, slightly above economists' expectations.
"We think that this pick-up reflects the strains on consumers' finances rather than their confidence about the future," said Samuel Tombs, economist at Capital Economics.
The GfK NOP consumer confidence index dropped five points to -30, almost matching the two-year low of -31 hit in April, as the one-off boost from the festivities and the extra holiday for Britain's royal wedding faded. Economists had only expected a dip to -27.
MONEY SUPPLY
Retail sales fell at the fastest rate for a year in July, according to a survey published earlier this week by the Confederation of British Industry, and a number of British retailers, including fashion chain Jane Norman and retailer of alcoholic drinks Oddbins, have fallen into administration in recent months.
Britain's economy barely grew between April and June and business surveys have indicated manufacturers are facing a slowdown, banks are keeping credit tight as they repair their balance sheets and consumers are suffering the worst squeeze in income for 30 years on the back of soaring food and fuel prices, higher taxes and slow wage increases."Consumer desire to get a tighter grip on their finances ... is the consequence of an uncertain and somewhat worrying longer-term outlook for the economy and jobs, as the major fiscal squeeze increasingly kicks in," said Howard Archer, economist at IHS Global Insight.On a more positive note, mortgage approvals numbered 48,421 in June, according to the BoE, up from 46,418 in May and the highest number since May 2010.
House prices also nudged up in July, according to mortgage lender Nationwide, although demand for homes remained sluggish."We doubt that the rise in the number of mortgage approvals in June marks the start of an upward trend in housing market activity," Tombs said. "The bigger picture is that approvals have barely moved in recent months."
Mortgage approvals are still running at half their long-term average, providing little hope that the housing market will pick up soon and boost the faltering economy.
The BoE's preferred gauge of money supply, M4 excluding intermediate and other financial corporations, fell 0.1 percent on the month after a 0.4 percent rise in May.
"The money supply data reflects concerns about consumer deleveraging. Quantitative easing was designed to boost monetary aggregates growth, and 15 months after the end of it money supply is contracting again," said Peter Dixon, economist at Commerzbank.
Link -
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/07/29/britain-consumers-idUSL3E7IT2EG2011072...===========================
As a comparison, both UK & OZ Consumers are wary of spending, both have Energy & Energy related Products hurting Disposable income and the UK actually has a higher inflation rate, which has been above 4% for all of 2011, whereas the OZ headline rate has just peeked above 3% for the first time.
http://www.rateinflation.com/inflation-rate/uk-historical-inflation-rate.php?form=ukir
Interestingly (pun intended), it is Australia where persistent noises are still heard about increasing interest rates, whereas the BOE chairman has made it clear that is not on the cards in the UK.
The Truth is, any interest rate increase in the UK &/or OZ, in the near term, would have really adcerse outcomes!