Weather Tonight: 9°c Partly Cloudy Night Morning: 14°c Light rain

Business

HEADLINES:

Inflation on the retreat as manufacturers cut prices

Simon English
10.07.09

There were fresh signs inflation is falling today when prices at the factory gate were shown to be dropping at the fastest pace for 12 years.

Government figures show that output prices — what manufacturers sell their goods for to retailers and other industries — fell 1.2% in June.

Input costs — what factories have to pay for raw materials — slumped 11% in the same month.

Jonathan Loynes, chief UK economist at Capital Economics, said: “The clear message is that, despite some tentative indications that conditions in the manufacturing sector have started to improve a bit, producers are under intense pressure to cut their prices. This bodes well for a fall in core consumer price inflation further ahead.”

The figures, which were lower than expected, suggest that rapid inflation — which could have followed the lowering of interest rates — shows little sign of emerging.

Howard Archer at Global Insight said: “June's retreat in producer prices reinforces the belief that consumer price inflation is headed down significantly further over the coming months.

“The data reinforces the belief that the Bank of England could yet very well increase its quantitative easing (QE) programme in August, particularly if the economic and lending data disappoint over the coming month,” he added.

Reader views (1)

 Add your view

Thank you Gordon Brown for creating the conditions for Stagflation.

- Dave Davies, Basingstoke, Hants


Add your comment

 

Your email address will not be published

Terms and conditions make text area bigger You have  characters left.


 
Market Roundup
FRIDAY UPDATE

Morgan Stanley casts cloud over Thomas Cook and Tui

Shares of the UK’s two biggest package holiday operators were among the heaviest blue-chip fallers today after one broker decided that their outlook was far from sunny

More



City Spy, cityspy@standard.co.uk

Mayday! Who will leave BA board?

“The board of British Airways, with fees of £50,000 a year for a part-time director attending seven meetings and all those unlimited first class flights for them and the family, has been one of the most eye-catching City gravy trains. But that train is about to get a lot shorter

More

CitiDirect.co.uk - Directory Enquiry Service for UK Businesses

CitiDirect.co.uk - Directory Enquiry Service for UK Businesses
Service Area or postcode