Battle is on to save Britain’s credit rating.
September 11th, 2009 by tom | 0 Comments | Filed in Central banks, Daily News, Employment, Energy Prices, Exchage Rate, Global Credit Crisis, Pensions, Recession, Retail, Saving, Stocks and shares, The Markets, UK Banks, UK employment
Despite the fact that the UK has officially been in recession for more than six month, till now it has managed to retain her highly important triple-A credit rating. As a general election begins to loom increasing larger on the horizon, a growing political consensus has begun to emerge on the need to cut public spending in order to ensure that The country’s financial credibility remains unscathed as the economy recovers gains momentum.
The rating agency Moody’s predicted on Wednesday that a downgrade was unlikely despite the fact that Britain’s budget deficit will soon have risen to be the highest among the World’s advanced economies.
The Bank of England will this week refrain from expanding its £175 billion stimulus package, as signs that the economy is emerging from recession, continue to gain ground and may have stopped contracting during the third quarter.
Although the UK equities market continues to recover, it was reported that it is doing so at too slow a pace to make sufficient inroads the aggregate shortfall of UK pension schemes which is currently approaching the £200 billion. According to data released by the Pension Protection Fund (PPF) from their 7800 Index, the total deficit of pension schemes with shortfalls stood at £194.6 billion at the end of August, up from £179 billion a month earlier. The PPF said that 85 per cent of all UK schemes were in deficit.
Boosted by higher production of cars and pharmaceuticals, U.K. manufacturing figures for July increased three times as much as had been forecasted, making for the highest increase in 18 months. According to figures released by the Office for National Statistics, production output rose 0.9 percent from the previous month, higher than the 0.3 percent increase that economists had predicted.
Shares in Sports Direct rose by 11.5 per cent to close on 129.85 pence after the company raised their full-year profit targets in the wake of a strong start to trading in the period. Sports Direct, controlled by Mike Ashley, owner of Newcastle United football club, said annual underlying earnings would be around £150 million, up from its previous forecasts of £140 million.
The unhealthy state of the UK construction was again in evidence with news that equipment hire company Ashtead’s underlying first-quarter pre-tax profit has fallen by 75 percent and would have been even worse as cost cutting efforts helped to maintain margins.
Ashtead, which rents industrial equipment from diggers to small tools in the UK as well as in the United States, softened the blow by stating that the company has typically made losses in the second half and that the board still expects full-year results to meet its previous expectations.
Underlying pre-tax profit for the fiscal first quarter ended July 31 fell to £8.8 million from £35.9 million in 2008, on rental revenue down 19 percent at £221.6 million. The company’s net debt fell to £873 million from £1.036 billion at the end of April.
Dow Jones & Co., have announced that they are to launch a new index that will cover small to medium sized U.K. companies designed to serve as a benchmark for their Newswires expanded small cap coverage.
Designed to measure the performance of small cap stocks, the Dow Jones U.K. Smaller Companies index will 188 companies listed in London. They will include stocks from the junior Alternative Investment Market and stocks listed in other indexes such as the FTSE 250 and FTSE Small Cap.
In a week of fairly frenzied takeover activity, the FTSE 100 index has risen above the 5,000 points mark, the highest it has been since October 2008.
The index closed up 57 points at 5004.30. Meanwhile the FTSE 250 continued its inexorable climb on Wednesday, up 101.72 points to close on 9,137.05.
The pound continued to rise against the dollar, whilst weakening further against the Euro and the Swiss Franc.
- Pound/US dollar 1.6547
- Pound/Euro 1.1373
- Pound/Japanese Yen 152.3058
- Pound/Swiss Franc 1.7238
Oil prices have risen again as a weak US dollar made the commodity cheaper against the other leading currencies.
Light sweet crude for October delivery rose 41 cents to $71.51 a barrel as OPEC oil ministers prepared to meet for a summit in Vienna.

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Tags: Alternative Investment Market, Ashtead, Bank of England, Banking, British Economy, British Pound, credit rating, Currency, Dow Jones, Economy, Employment, Financial News, FTSE, general election, Money Markets, Newcastle United, Office for National Statistics, Pension Protection Fund, PPF, public spending, Recession, Sports Direct, Stock Markets, Stocks and shares, UK Banks, UK Economy, UK pension, UK Recession
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