The Sun (Malaysia)

British manufactur­ers trim investment plans

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LONDON: British manufactur­ers reined in their investment plans after the Brexit vote in June, according to a survey that showed no immediate big hit due to the referendum but may add to doubts about the long-term health of the economy.

Manufactur­ing output worsened in the three months to August as domestic orders wilted, reversing an improvemen­t earlier this year, industry associatio­n EEF and accountanc­y firm BDO said.

Still, there was no sign of a sudden drop in activity after the vote to leave the European Union (EU) and the plunge in the value of the pound boosted export orders, they said, echoing another upbeat survey of manufactur­ing output last week.

The Bank of England, which has said it expects to cut interest rates again this year, is likely to view the weaker investment plans by manufactur­ers as consistent with its expectatio­n that Britain’s uncertain future trading ties with the EU will gradually take its toll.

The EEF’s gauge of investment plans for the next 12 months slipped a point to -10, its lowest since late 2009. Despite the uncertaint­y, the EEF survey of 450 manufactur­ers showed they mostly expect output and orders to improve, especially for exports. Employment intentions improved slightly. EEF expects Britain’s economic growth to stall in the second half of 2016 and stay weak in 2017.

Last month, the Confederat­ion of British Industry said investment plans by services companies – which account for a far larger chunk of the economy than manufactur­ers – were at their leanest in more than four years. – Reuters

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