Arab Times

UK factories have best month for orders since 1988: survey

Export orders surge

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Chief Operating Officer (COO) of Airbus Customer Services John Leahy attends a closing press conference at Le Bourget on June 22 during the

Internatio­nal Paris Air Show. (AFP) LONDON, June 22, (RTRS): British factory orders have hit their highest level in nearly 30 years, according to a monthly Confederat­ion of British Industry survey which might encourage Bank of England policymake­rs who favour an interest rate hike.

The CBI said its factory order book balance jumped to +16 in June, its highest level since 1988. Economists taking part in a Reuters poll had expected a weaker reading of +7 compared with +9 in May.

Export order growth was its strongest in 22 years, the CBI said, helped by the fall in the value of the pound that was triggered by last year’s Brexit vote.

The strong performanc­e by manufactur­ers will be noted by the BoE, where three members of the eightstron­g Monetary Policy Committee last week voted to raise rates, citing among other factors a pick-up in exports and investment which could help to offset a squeeze in spending for domestic consumers.

The MPC’s five other members backed keeping rates on hold but on Wednesday, the BoE’s chief economist, Andy Haldane, said he was likely to vote for a rate hike too later this year, as long as the economic data justified it.

BoE Governor Mark Carney said on Tuesday he wanted to see how Britain’s economy coped with uncertaint­ies about Brexit in the coming months before considerin­g a rate hike.

Philip Shaw, an economist with Investec, said the CBI survey could provide marginal support for the case for a rate hike.

“But while it’s reassuring to see some evidence of a strengthen­ing of exports, one should remember that manufactur­ing still only accounts for about 10 percent of the economy,” he said, adding that the much bigger services sector was slowing due to the squeeze on consumer spending power.

The CBI survey showed factory output in the past three months slowed back to a level last seen in January while expectatio­ns for the next three months remained strong.

“Neverthele­ss, with cost pressures remaining elevated, it’s no surprise to see that manufactur­ers continue to have high expectatio­ns for the prices they plan to charge,” Rain Newton-Smith, the CBI’s chief economist, said. Managing Director of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund Christine Lagarde (right), arrives with Spanish Minister of Economy Luis de Guindos to pose before a dinner of the Group Internatio­nal Financial Action (GAFI) at the Cartuja

de Ara Christi, in Puig near Valencia on June 21. (AFP)

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