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12-08-2016, 05:52 PM
1

Recession is already here for a crucial part of the British economy — and it is only

https://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/re...141257831.html

Recession is a word that has been thrown about an awful lot in the UK in the aftermath of the country's vote to leave the European Union. Several recent forecasts, including those from Credit Suisse and Barclays, suggest that Britain is plunging toward recession, and soft economic releases like PMIs and sentiment surveys are all pointing towards the R word.

However, a recession is already here for one sector of the British economy, according to the latest data released by the Office for National Statistics on Friday morning.

Numbers from the ONS show that the British construction industry, the sector of the economy that makes sure we have got roofs over our heads and offices to work in, slipped into recession during the first half of 2016.

Output in the sector dropped by 2.2% year-on-year in June, following on from a 1.6% y-o-y fall in May. Annual construction output has now fallen for every single month of 2016 so far.

On a month-to-month basis, output actually fell less than expected, dropping 0.9% against a forecast of 1%, but regardless of that, the construction industry's huge slump is troubling.

Here is the chart from the ONS showing the drastic downturn:


ons construction
Michal Osmenda/CC 2.0

Commenting on the results of the ONS' release, Samuel Tombs of Pantheon Macroeconomics said (emphasis ours):

"June’s official data confirm that the construction sector re-entered recession in the first half of this year, as public sector cuts and Brexit risk took their toll. Construction output now is estimated to have fallen by 0.7% quarter-on-quarter in Q2, following Q1’s 0.4% drop. Q2’s decline slightly exceeds the 0.4% fall incorporated in the preliminary estimate of GDP, but the sector’s 6% share of GDP means that this revision has no impact to one decimal place on GDP growth.

"The downturn looks set to deepen in Q3; July’s construction PMI broadly is consistent with output falling by about 3.5% quarter-on-quarter. Meanwhile, Brexit negotiations will be protracted, so businesses will hold off committing to major capital expenditure for a long time to come. In addition, the public investment plans won’t be reviewed until the Autumn Statement at the end of the year and few construction projects are genuinely ‘shovel ready’. Accordingly, we continue to think that a slump in construction activity will play a key role in pushing the overall economy into recession over the coming quarters."

Things already look absolutely dreadful for the construction sector, but they are set to get even worse, as the data released on Friday includes the period to the end of June, before the UK voted for Brexit. Obviously until the post-referendum data is released we cannot be 100% certain that the sector will deteriorate even further, but as it stands, everything is pointing in that direction.

Markit and CIPS' construction PMI for July, a widely respected economic survey which is usually fairly accurate in predicting what is coming, points to a further downturn. July's PMI data on the state of the UK's construction sector showed a reading of 45.9, which was actually substantially better than the 43.8 expected in July, but still represented the worst reading since the middle of 2009, and a further fall from June's disastrous 46.0 reading.

The purchasing managers index (PMI) figures from Markit are given as a number between 0 and 100. Anything above 50 signals growth, while anything below means a contraction in activity — so the lower the number, the worse the outcome.

At the time of the release, Pantheon Macro noted that the sector is "bearing the brunt of the post-referendum collapse in business confidence."


(apologies, the chart mentioned doesn't reproduce on copy/paste)
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12-08-2016, 06:07 PM
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Re: Recession is already here for a crucial part of the British economy — and it is only

41,222 new homes registered in Q2, reports NHBC

http://www.nhbc.co.uk/media-centre/a...-reports-nhbc/

A total of 41,222 new homes were registered by NHBC in Q2 throughout the UK, according to NHBC’s latest new home registration statistics.

31,753 new homes were registered in the private sector, a 6% increase on the 30,086 a year ago. The public and affordable sector was down 13% with 9,469 new homes registered compared to 10,845 in Q2 2015.

The overall number represents a 1% increase on the same period last year when 40,931 new homes were registered, making it the strongest quarter since 2007.

The figures portray a mixed picture across the UK with half of the 12 regions showing an increase in registrations during Q2, including the South East (+37%) and the North East (+34%) with the other half reporting a decline in numbers, such as Wales (-30%) and London (-29%) compared to the same period last year.

The number of new home completions for the rolling 12 months July 2015 – June 2016 also increased by 6% when compared to the previous 12 months (July 2014 – June 2015). This mirrors the strong growth seen in registrations in recent years, resulting in these new homes being completed over the past twelve months.

As the leading warranty and insurance provider for new homes in the UK, NHBC’s registration statistics are a lead indicator of UK house-building activity. For 80 years, NHBC has been committed to driving up quality and raising standards in housebuilding and has approximately 80% market share.

Commenting on the Q2 figures, NHBC Chief Executive Mike Quinton said: “Our latest statistics show that the industry continues to consolidate on the strong growth in registrations seen over recent years.

“These registrations reflect continued industry confidence in the run-up to the EU Referendum at the end of June. Indeed, this period was the strongest quarter since Q4 2007, albeit still some way off levels seen over a decade ago.
These comments certainly reflect my experience of new-builds in my neck of the woods - thousands of new houses springing up in every town and village - so whose figures are right?
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12-08-2016, 06:38 PM
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Re: Recession is already here for a crucial part of the British economy — and it is only

If builders are in recession, it' "Just another Brick in the Wall", seriously though, there should be appointed a statistics commissioner, who audits these claims and counter claims, people are fed up, and take no notice either way.
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12-08-2016, 06:51 PM
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Re: Recession is already here for a crucial part of the British economy — and it is only

Doom, Gloom
Gloom, Doom

And the Greeks thought they were bad off.

Please Please Please no more crap.

It all sounds like Cameron's spin doctors.........
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12-08-2016, 08:29 PM
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Re: Recession is already here for a crucial part of the British economy — and it is only

It also never helped matters with the Government relaxing building laws in 2015.
It cost our local council £1 million because Criterion put in plans to make 3 old blocks of offices in the town centre of Basildon into 384 flats. Basildon Council said they would grant planning permission providing Criterion donate £1 million towards affordable housing across the borough. The Government relaxed the laws which now allows this to happen without planning permission and Criterion did the two finger shuffle to Basildon Council.

http://www.braintreeandwithamtimes.c...egal_loophole/

Now just imagine how many house owners are doing extentions to their homes instead of up sizing to a newer home because of this ruling. The market has been made weaker by this and so the builders are all now sitting about waiting for all those new homes to be sold before they can afford to build anymore. Hence the talk of reccession. Plenty of homes just no buyers until our industries get an injection off that £350 million that we are still paying each week to the EU.
I heard today that Article 50 is not gonna be used this year so until that happens maybe next year nothing in the building trade is gonna move forward. Thank god I don't need to buy a new home just yet.
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13-08-2016, 12:18 AM
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Re: Recession is already here for a crucial part of the British economy — and it is only

Sounds to me like yet more doom and gloom being put about by upset remainiac clots.

As Spitfire said, I don't take any notice of this sort of thing.
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13-08-2016, 07:09 AM
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Re: Recession is already here for a crucial part of the British economy — and it is only

You probably have not noticed real people losing their jobs.
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13-08-2016, 07:16 AM
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Re: Recession is already here for a crucial part of the British economy — and it is only

Construction was in the doldrums long before Brexit, and its not only about houses.

When the coalmines were closed 30,000 miners lost their jobs, these men got large payouts and many schemes to help them back to work. In that same year 100,000 construction workers lost their jobs.
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13-08-2016, 10:53 AM
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Re: Recession is already here for a crucial part of the British economy — and it is only

Originally Posted by Purwell ->
You probably have not noticed real people losing their jobs.
That couldn't possibly be as a result of East European workers taking jobs at half the pay, of course.
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13-08-2016, 11:05 AM
10

Re: Recession is already here for a crucial part of the British economy — and it is only

More likely the fault of mean bosses who refuse to pay the going rate and have not invested in our youngsters by way of training them for skilled jobs.
 
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