UK Publications
Below is a list of our UK Publications for the last 5 months. If you are looking for reports older than 5 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.
Global Daily Monitor 
- Surprise! Payrolls were revised to show jobs falling less than half as much this year as previously thought.
 
- The payrolls trend is improving, and surveys suggest job falls are ending, while pay growth is proving sticky.
 
- We reluctantly bring forward our rate-cut call to August, from November, but it’s a ‘one-and-done’.
 
 
- Food, a motor fuels base effect and unwinding clothes discounting drove up June CPI inflation to 3.6%.
 
- We think the inflation surprise represents genuine news rather than noise that will unwind in July.
 
- We raise our forecasts, now expecting CPI inflation to average 3.6% in H2, up from 3.5% previously.
 
 
- The ONS BICS survey is timely, samples seven times more firms than the PMI and covers all the economy.
 
- The BICS survey suggests stickier services inflation than the PMI and a stronger job recovery since April.
 
- US tariffs are having a small impact on the UK economy, with 78% of firms unaffected.
 
 
- We expect real household disposable income to grow by 2.0% in 2025 and 1.3% in 2026.
 
- Elevated inflation expectations will likely keep wage growth slowing only gradually.
 
- Our call for 1.5% year-over-year consumption growth over 2025-to-27 needs only a modest saving rate fall.
 
 
- The OBR has again deemed the public finances to be on an unsustainable trajectory.
 
- Climate-change mitigation and an ageing population will be costly for the exchequer.
 
- Lifting productivity growth is crucial for ensuring the debt burden remains manageable.
 
 
- Green shoots of recovery emerge in the housing market as stamp duty disruption fades.
 
- The RICS new buyer enquiries balance jumped by the most month-to-month in 24 years, ignoring Covid.
 
- Homeowners should face a much smaller refinancing rate rise this year than in 2023 or 2024.
 
 
- The UK’s unsustainable government-debt trajectory leaves gilts vulnerable to selling off.
 
- The OBR this week detailed risks to its projection that government debt will hit 270% of GDP in the 2070s.
 
- Gilt yields will likely avoid a sharp sell-off as long as  the government sticks to reasonably tight fiscal rules.
 
 
- We expect CPI inflation to nudge up to 3.5% in June from 3.4% in April, driven by food prices.
 
- An earlier CPI collection date than our assumption of June 17 would pose downside risk…
 
- …Clothes and hotel prices likely strengthened later in the month as temperatures rose.
 
 
- We expect May’s monthly payroll fall to be revised up by 77K, and June’s first estimate to show a 15K drop.
 
- Payrolls have gone haywire, while leading indicators suggest job growth is improving.
 
- Private ex-bonus AWE should rise 0.5% month-to-month as pay growth slows only gradually.
 
 
- U-turns scorch the Chancellor’s fiscal headroom, and appetite for corrective action seems limited.
 
- We expect ‘stealth tax’ hikes, some of which boost inflation, and a fudge of the fiscal rules in the Budget.
 
- The PMI and DMP show better growth and slower inflation, but we expect only one more rate cut in 2025.
 
 
- We expect GDP to rise 0.1% month-to-month in May, as professional services activity rebounds.
 
- We still look for quarter-to-quarter growth of 0.2% in Q2, below the MPC’s latest projection, 0.3%.
 
- We remain upbeat on underlying growth, partly supporting our call for just one more rate cut in 2025.
 
 
- We expect CPI inflation to tick up to 3.5% in June from 3.4% in May, 0.1pp higher than the MPC expects.
 
- Surging food prices—the biggest three-month rise in two years—and motor fuel base effects boost inflation.
 
- Hot weather and a likely late CPI collection date pose upside risks to clothes prices.
 
 
- An upward revision to Q1 consumer spending growth gives a more solid base to economic growth.
 
- The household saving rate dip in Q1 is a sign of things to come, which should support consumer spending.
 
- Firms are borrowing again as all the “Liberation Day” surge in economic policy uncertainty has unwound.
 
 
- Official payroll data are vastly exaggerating the weakness in the job market, in our view.
 
- May’s payrolls reading is especially unreliable, while the official data have diverged hugely from surveys.
 
- Job vacancies seem to be stabilising, redundancies are low and jobless claims are down since October.
 
 
- Collapsing payrolls in May look inconsistent with stable or improving survey-based measures of jobs.
 
- The soft data suggest the worst of the slowdown caused by the payroll-tax hike is behind us.
 
- Stable economic growth, driven by less trade-related uncertainty, will give a hawkish tint to the job data.
 
 
- The PMI’s headline activity index rose in June but still signals unchanged quarter-to-quarter GDP in Q2…
 
- …But we think the PMI continues to underestimate activity and retain our call for GDP growth of 0.2%.
 
- The services output balance fell sharply in June, but that drop looks erratic; the MPC will wait for clarity.
 
 
- The MPC kept rates on hold in June, but one more member than we expected voted to cut by 25bp.
 
- Rate-setters left their key guidance paragraph broadly unchanged; “gradual and careful” remains the mantra.
 
- We still expect just one more cut to Bank Rate in 2025, in November.
 
 
- Inflation fell in May, as the ONS chopped 0.1pp off price growth to correct for the error in April’s data.
 
- Headline CPI at 3.4% in May, down from 3.5%, would have been unchanged without the ONS’s adjustment.
 
- Energy price increases mean we now expect inflation to peak at 3.7% in September, up from 3.6% before.
 
 
- Official house price inflation will slow in April as stamp-duty disruption feeds through.
 
- The slowdown will be short-lived, with forward-looking activity indicators improving in May.
 
- We retain our call for house prices to rise 4.5% year-over-year in 2025.
 
 
- Five-year household inflation expectations hit a record high in May, adjusting for a break in the BoE’s survey.
 
- Inflation expectations have surged more since August 2024 than past behaviour would have signalled.
 
- Elevated inflation expectations mean the MPC cannot simply ‘look through’ above-target inflation.