Pantheon Macroeconomics

Best viewed on a device with a bigger screen...

Pantheon Publications

Below is a list of our Publications for the last 5 months. If you are looking for reports older than 6 months please email info@pantheonmacro.com, or contact your account rep.

Please use the filters on the right to search for a specific date or topic.

Daily Monitor Elliott Laidman Doak (Senior UK Economist)

11 November 2025 UK Monitor Resilient consumer spending is supporting GDP growth

  • We expect GDP to rise by 0.1% in September, boosted by solid retail sales and car registrations.
  • Industrial production likely cut 8bp from GDP growth in September as a cyber attack halted autos output.
  • Resilient economic activity means the MPC has little scope to cut quickly in 2026, in our view.

5 November 2025 UK Monitor Labour market preview: job market stable ahead of the Budget

  • We expect ‘final’ payrolls to be unchanged month-to-month in October.
  • The bulk of evidence points to employment growth stabilising as the hit from payroll-tax hikes fades.
  • Private pay growth should slow further, encouraging MPC doves that they can cut rates in December.

4 November 2025 UK Monitor Steady GDP growth will keep corporate distress contained

  • The insolvency rate has plateaued above pre-pandemic levels but is unthreatening.
  • We see little indication that higher insolvency rates will lead to a sharp rise in unemployment.
  • Insolvency numbers will fall as businesses adjust to higher interest rates and GDP growth holds firm.

30 October 2025 UK Monitor Consumers and businesses appear confident ahead of the Budget

  • Healthy credit flows imply businesses and consumers remain confident ahead of the Budget…
  • …and mortgage approvals rising to a nine-month high suggests the housing market is still solid.
  • Rumours of a larger productivity downgrade by the OBR make an income-tax hike more likely. 

28 October 2025 UK Monitor Budget uncertainty to keep house price inflation muted

  • Solid activity data suggest that fundamental demand in the housing market is holding firm…
  • ...but house price inflation remains weak, because of April’s stamp-duty hike and worries about the Budget.
  • So, we retain our call for house prices to rise by just 2.5% year-over-year in 2025.

24 October 2025 UK Monitor More headroom and less inflation mean we cut our gilt-yield calls

  • Soft inflation data and the prospect of greater fiscal headroom mean we cut our gilt-yield forecasts.
  • We now expect the two-year gilt yield to end the year at 3.80%, and the 10-year at 4.55%.
  • All of the good news is priced into yields, increasing the risk of a post-Budget market disappointment.

9 October 2025 UK Monitor GDP likely unchanged in August as industrial output drags on growth

  • We expect GDP to be unchanged in August, as an erratic fall in mining output drags on growth…
  • …Services activity likely saved GDP from a fall, with rebounds in large sub-sectors boosting growth.
  • We think that underlying economic activity remains firm, which will keep the MPC on hold this year.

2 October 2025 UK Monitor Gilt yields to remain elevated as political risk dominates

  • Gilt auctions are still well supported, and financial conditions are orderly, despite high uncertainty…
  • ...but yields will remain high as the MPC stays on hold and markets demand a premium for political risk.
  • We expect 10-year and 30-year gilt yields to end 2025 at their current rates of 4.7% and 5.5%, respectively.
  Publication Filters

Change View: List   Small Grid  

Filter by Keyword

Filter by Region

Filter by Publication Type

Filter by Date
(6 months only; older publications available on request)

  Quick Tag Filters
 

Sign up for your complimentary trial

To start your complimentary trial, highlight the areas you are interested in subscribing to and click next.

United States

Eurozone

United Kingdom

China +

Emerging Asia

Latin America

Next

 
Consistently Right
Access Key Enabled Navigation
Keywords for: Publications

independent macro research, Pantheon Macro, Pantheon Macroeconomics, independent research, ian shepherdson, economic intelligence