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 Chartbook

1 July 2025 UK Monitor Good signs for continued solid GDP growth

  • 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.

Elliott Laidman Doak (Senior UK Economist)UK

26 June 2025 UK Monitor Payroll data have gone haywire; job growth is likely improving

  • 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.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

25 June 2025 UK Monitor Labour market continues to ease gradually, but the worst is over

  • 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.

Elliott Laidman Doak (Senior UK Economist)UK

24 June 2025 UK Monitor Slow growth and cooling price pressures, according to the PMI

  • 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.

Elliott Laidman Doak (Senior UK Economist)UK

20 June 2025 UK Monitor MPC keeps rates on hold and guidance unchanged

  • 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.

Elliott Laidman Doak (Senior UK Economist)UK

19 June 2025 UK Monitor Inflation ticks down in May but underlying pressures remain strong

  • 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.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

18 June 2025 UK Monitor House prices will fall in April, but the slowdown will be short-lived

  • 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.

Elliott Laidman Doak (Senior UK Economist)UK

17 June 2025 UK Monitor Long-term inflation expectations are too high

  • 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.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

13 June 2025 UK Monitor GDP's April drop was exaggerated; output will rebound

  • The unwinding of tariff and tax-hike front-running dragged down GDP growth in April…
  • …But the monthly fall looks exaggerated to us, so we expect GDP to rebound in May.
  • We thus only shave our forecast for Q2 GDP growth, to 0.2% quarter-to-quarter, from 0.3% previously.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

12 June 2025 UK Monitor MPC preview: on hold, but more open to a cut in August

  • We expect the MPC to vote seven-to-two to keep Bank Rate on hold at next week’s meeting.
  • Payrolls lift the chance of an August cut, but the MPC will likely stick to its “gradual and cautious” guidance.
  • We are comfortable assuming only one more rate cut in this cycle, even if it may now come sooner.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

11 June 2025 UK Monitor A dovish labour-market report, but jobs will recover

  • May’s huge fall in payrolls looks exaggerated; other indicators, such as redundancies, are improving.
  • Rising LFS employment and falling payrolls point to workers shifting towards self-employment.
  • Wage growth is easing gradually but still remains way above inflation-target-consistent rates.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

10 June 2025 UK Monitor CPI preview: we still think May inflation will match the MPC's call

  • We expect CPI inflation in May to slow to 3.4%—close to rounding to 3.3%—from 3.5% in April.
  • A correction to Vehicle Excise Duty and airfare falls will be partly offset by strong food and clothes prices.
  • May’s CPI inflation will likely match the MPC’s forecast, and services inflation will slightly exceed it. 

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

6 June 2025 UK Monitor CPI preview: ONS error leaves our May call close to rounding to 3.3%

  • The ONS overstated April CPI by 0.1pp because of an error in Vehicle Duty; this will be corrected in May CPI.
  • We adjust our forecasts only fractionally because we had assumed a good chance that VED was wrong.
  • Strong goods prices mean inflation should slow only to 3.4% in May, from the erroneous 3.5% in April.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

5 June 2025 UK Monitor MPC far too pessimistic about underlying GDP growth

  • The May PMI shows UK growth still weak, but recovering as April’s tariff panic fades.
  • GDP growth usually far exceeds the PMI steer when uncertainty is high; we look for 0.3% q/q growth in Q2.
  • Services firms squeezing margins holds out the hope of inflation easing, but we think it’s just a blip.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

4 June 2025 UK Monitor Labour market preview: earnings growth slowing, payrolls troughing

  • We expect the initial estimate of May payrolls to show a 26K month-to-month decline.
  • LFS unemployment will likely tick up to 4.6% in April, and LFS employment should gain 48K.
  • We expect year-over-year whole-economy AWE ex-bonus growth to fall to 5.3% in April, from 5.6%.

Elliott Laidman Doak (Senior UK Economist)UK

3 June 2025 UK Monitor Consumers are spending rather than saving

  • Consumers are back to spending rather than saving, which should keep GDP growth ticking along.
  • Households seem to be reducing saving, and borrowing on credit cards to support spending.
  • Manufacturing is past the worst, and so far we see little sign of trade diversion cutting goods inflation.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

May 2025- UK Chartbook

STRONG MOMENTUM, ELEVATED INFLATION...

  • …BACK TO ONLY ONE MORE RATE CUT THIS YEAR

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

30 May 2025 UK Monitor April administered-price hikes are far from just a one off

  • Our early calculations suggest CPI inflation will fall only slightly in May, to 3.4%.
  • Clothes, computer games, hotel prices and food should mostly offset a fall in travel prices.
  • Duty hikes scheduled for 2026 will support headline inflation; we expect more duty hikes to be announced.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

29 May 2025 UK Monitor Forecast review: stronger growth and sticky inflation take away a cut

  • The tariff shock is fading and Q1 GDP beat consensus, so we raise our 2025 growth forecast to 1.3%.
  • Inflation will hover around 3.4% for the rest of 2025, and drop below 3.0% again only next April.
  • Easing uncertainty, elevated inflation and growth momentum mean just one more rate cut in 2025.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

28 May 2025 UK Monitor The MPC will hit neutral soon if it keeps cutting Bank Rate

  • Our high neutral rate estimate of 3.75%-4.0% is one reason we expect only one more MPC rate cut.
  • Elevated inflation expectations, especially for consumers, point to a high neutral rate.
  • Slowing disinflation in 2025 also suggests that Bank Rate is only modestly restrictive now.

Rob Wood (Chief UK Economist)UK

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