Pantheon Macroeconomics

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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.

Daily Monitor

20 February 2026 UK Monitor Insolvencies will continue to fall as GDP growth accelerates in 2026

  • Insolvencies fell year-over-year in January despite months of political chaos causing weaker growth.
  • Retail insolvencies have risen, likely as 2025’s payroll-tax and minimum-wage hikes hit the sector hard.
  • But overall business failures should drop a little in 2026, as growth recovers and borrowing costs fall.

19 February 2026 UK Monitor Inflation points to March rate cut, but underlying inflation is sticky

  • Energy, education, food, rents and airfares cut inflation to 3.0% in January, and further falls are likely.
  • But services inflation exceeded the MPC’s forecast by 30bp, and underlying inflation accelerated.
  • A March rate cut remains highly likely despite the inflation miss, as rate-setters focus on unemployment.

18 February 2026 UK Monitor Jobless rate rise points to March rate cut, but payrolls stabilising

  • Jobless rate hitting a 5-year high of 5.2% in December makes a March rate cut more likely.
  • But payrolls beat consensus and have nearly stabilised, while redundancies appear to have peaked.
  • Private pay rose by the most month-to-month since April and will likely exceed the MPC’s January call.

17 February 2026 UK Monitor Happy Anniversary: 500 Monitors down, what have we learnt?

  • We reflect on our calls, and what we should learn from the misses, in our 500th UK Economic Monitor.
  • Solid growth and persistent inflation in 2025 panned out, but job growth was weaker than we expected.
  • Our three key themes now? The high neutral rate; structural labour-market shifts; persistent inflation. 

13 February 2026 UK Monitor. CPI preview 2: shaving our January forecast to 3.0%

  • We expect CPI inflation to decline to 3.0% in January, from 3.4% in December.
  • We shaved our call from 3.1% previously, partly as we factor in more generous pub sales than we expected.
  • But strong BRC Shop Prices and firm hotel charges mean inflation should exceed the MPC’s 2.9% call.

12 February 2026 UK Monitor Labour market preview: rising LFS jobs, and payrolls barely falling

  • We expect the flash payrolls estimate to show a 10K month-to-month fall in January.
  • Stabilising single-month unemployment suggests the headline jobless rate will hold at 5.1% in December.
  • Wage inflation will tick down in December, but surveys suggest that pay gains will plateau soon.

11 February 2026 UK Monitor CPI preview 1: base effects, energy and airfares to lower inflation

  • We expect CPI inflation to decline to 3.1% in January, from 3.4% in December.
  • Education, airfares and energy prices will all contribute to the inflation slowdown at the start of the year.
  • But strong BRC Shop Prices and firm hotel prices mean inflation should exceed the MPC’s 2.9% call.

10 February 2026 UK Monitor CPI weight changes fractionally raise our inflation forecast

  • The ONS updates CPI weights twice a year, in January and February.
  • Our forecast of weight changes raises our inflation forecast only fractionally; by 3bp on average in 2026.
  • ONS improvements to hotel price measurement will likely reduce seasonal swings in the component.

6 February 2026 UK Monitor We expect a March rate cut after MPC declares inflation banished

  • A dovish five-to-four MPC vote to hold rates alongside changes to guidance signal a March rate cut.
  • The MPC slashed its two-year-ahead inflation projection by 30bp, justifying two rate cuts this year.
  • We shift our call to a March rate cut, from April before, but think sticky pay will stop the MPC easing again.

5 February 2026 UK Monitor PMI shows growth rebounding as uncertainty falls

  • The January PMI hit an 18-month high, consistent with 0.3-to-0.4% quarter-to-quarter growth in Q1.
  • Jobs continue to fall, according to the PMI, as the payroll-tax hike forces firms to cut back.
  • But falling jobs are structural; PMI price balances were broadly steady above inflation-target-consistent levels.

4 February 2026 UK Monitor Gilt-market mash-up already in motion and has further to run

  • Issuance changes, a drop in the fiscal risk premium and weaker data pushed down yields from November.
  • But the gilt-market rally is reversing as political risk rises and the market prices fewer cuts from the MPC.
  • We expect 10-year and 30-year yields to rise to a 2026 high of 4.60% and 5.40%, respectively, in Q3.

3 February 2026 UK Monitor GDP likely unchanged in December but activity will pick up in Q1

  • Mining output likely rose sharply in December as Brent and Forties loadings surged…
  • ...but falling manufacturing activity and energy supply output will drag on GDP growth.
  • We expect quarter-to-quarter GDP growth in Q4 of 0.1%, but it could tip to 0.2%.

30 January 2026 UK Monitor Housing market set to heat up over the course of 2026

  • House prices jumped in November, leaving our call for a 2.0% year-over-year gain in Q4 2025 on track.
  • We expect the market to heat up in 2026, as new buyers return from the sidelines.
  • House price inflation should rise to 3.0% by Q4 2026, supported by stronger demand and weak supply.

29 January 2026 UK Monitor MPC preview: on hold, still guiding to another cut, eventually

  • We expect the MPC to vote six-to-three to keep Bank Rate on hold at its February 5 meeting.
  • The decision is a foregone conclusion, so focus will be on the guidance, which we expect to change little.
  • Pay settlements likely slowing only slightly in 2026 will keep the MPC coy about the timing of the next cut.

28 January 2026 UK Monitor BRC Shop Price Index points to stubborn inflation

  • The BRC Shop Price Index showed goods inflation hitting a near two-year high in January.
  • Strength was widespread and pushes up our January CPI inflation forecast to 3.1%, from 3.0% before.
  • We treat the BRC with some caution, yet it carries a warning that inflation pressures may remain elevated.

27 January 2026 UK Monitor Retail sales volumes will keep trending up

  • Retail sales growth month-to-month was flattered by jewellery sales and seasonals in December.
  • But revisions mean sales increased by a solid 2.7% month-to-month annualised over 2024-to-25.
  • Rising major purchase intentions and younger people’s confidence bode well for the outlook.

23 January 2026 UK Monitor Medium-term borrowing will likely be higher than the OBR expects

  • December’s public finances report showed borrowing was below the OBR’s most recent projections.
  • The shaky foundations of the Budget create a risk of looser fiscal policy in the coming years.
  • Risks are tilted towards a sell-off in the gilt market as investors re-price in long-term fiscal pressures.

22 January 2026 UK Monitor Inflation will fall to 2.1% in July, before rising to 2.8% in December

  • Tobacco duty and a jump in airfares drove up CPI inflation to 3.4% in December, a touch above our call.
  • We note a few obvious erratic factors, with a January airfares correction likely balanced by solid hotel prices.
  • Inflation gives rate-setters little reason to rush to cut next month, but we see a final rate reduction in April.

21 January 2026 UK Monitor Payrolls look implausibly weak, vacancies are stable

  • Yesterday’s labour-market headlines were dovish, with payrolls falling and wage growth slowing.
  • But payrolls look implausibly weak relative to surveys, while job vacancies point to stable labour demand.
  • Compositional effects flatter the pay slowing in 2025, while PAYE points to a large AWE jump in December.

20 January 2026 UK Monitor Political risk set to dominate the headlines later this year

  • The Reform Party is well ahead in the polls, and Sir Keir Starmer remains deeply unpopular with voters.
  • A drubbing for the government at the local elections in May could trigger a Labour leadership challenge.
  • Most roads lead to further fiscal U-turns, increasing the risk of looser fiscal policy.
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