pointzero8
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Thursday 24 May 2012
GBP: Revised GDP q/q
"GDP fell 0.3% in the first quarter, a worse showing than the initial estimate of a 0.2% decline. That confirms the second quarterly contraction of economic growth in a row, generally regarded as the technical definition of a recession."
Actual -0.3% Forecast -0.2% Previous -0.2%
"There are 3 versions of GDP released a month apart - Preliminary, Revised, and Final. The Preliminary release is the earliest and thus tends to have the most impact"
From the ONS:
Economic background
Over the past eighteen months, the economy has experienced a mild contraction in output. This reflects global economic headwinds as well as domestic economic conditions such as the impact of continuing high rates of inflation in the UK. This is mirrored in the labour market where employment has been fairly static.
The weakness in output has been concentrated in the production and construction industries, while the services industries have contributed positively to growth in the latest quarter. Output in the production industries is driven by continuing weakness in oil and gas output. Excluding the oil and gas sector, gross value added has contracted by 0.3 per cent in line with the economy as a whole.
In terms of expenditure, growth has depended primarily on net trade, with some expansion in exports while imports have held fairly steady. The Euro Area's financial difficulties have held back exports to the EU, but exports to the rest of the world have shown some strength. Household final consumption expenditure has fallen a little in real terms over the past eighteen months and there has been a sharp running down of inventory levels, while gross fixed capital formation has been broadly flat.
Four quarter growth in the GDP deflator, which is an indicator of domestic price pressures, has fallen from 2.4 percent in 2011 quarter one to 2.0 per cent in 2012 quarter one, corresponding with an easing in headline consumer price inflation. The GDP deflator excludes the direct impact of the rising prices of oil and other imported commodities and is therefore lower than the CPI measure of inflation."
Technical Note:
Time consideration
HIGH Thu 28 Apr 2011 1. 67 46 1 03:00 TO
LOW Fri 13 Jan 2012 1. 52 33 0 15:20
-1,513.10 268,580 Minutes
50% of 268,580 = 134,290 + Fri 13 Jan 2012 15:20 = Wed 23 May 21:30 (All times GMT) Action: Draw and label Vertical Line
GBP: Revised GDP q/q
"GDP fell 0.3% in the first quarter, a worse showing than the initial estimate of a 0.2% decline. That confirms the second quarterly contraction of economic growth in a row, generally regarded as the technical definition of a recession."
Actual -0.3% Forecast -0.2% Previous -0.2%
"There are 3 versions of GDP released a month apart - Preliminary, Revised, and Final. The Preliminary release is the earliest and thus tends to have the most impact"
From the ONS:
Economic background
Over the past eighteen months, the economy has experienced a mild contraction in output. This reflects global economic headwinds as well as domestic economic conditions such as the impact of continuing high rates of inflation in the UK. This is mirrored in the labour market where employment has been fairly static.
The weakness in output has been concentrated in the production and construction industries, while the services industries have contributed positively to growth in the latest quarter. Output in the production industries is driven by continuing weakness in oil and gas output. Excluding the oil and gas sector, gross value added has contracted by 0.3 per cent in line with the economy as a whole.
In terms of expenditure, growth has depended primarily on net trade, with some expansion in exports while imports have held fairly steady. The Euro Area's financial difficulties have held back exports to the EU, but exports to the rest of the world have shown some strength. Household final consumption expenditure has fallen a little in real terms over the past eighteen months and there has been a sharp running down of inventory levels, while gross fixed capital formation has been broadly flat.
Four quarter growth in the GDP deflator, which is an indicator of domestic price pressures, has fallen from 2.4 percent in 2011 quarter one to 2.0 per cent in 2012 quarter one, corresponding with an easing in headline consumer price inflation. The GDP deflator excludes the direct impact of the rising prices of oil and other imported commodities and is therefore lower than the CPI measure of inflation."
Technical Note:
Time consideration
HIGH Thu 28 Apr 2011 1. 67 46 1 03:00 TO
LOW Fri 13 Jan 2012 1. 52 33 0 15:20
-1,513.10 268,580 Minutes
50% of 268,580 = 134,290 + Fri 13 Jan 2012 15:20 = Wed 23 May 21:30 (All times GMT) Action: Draw and label Vertical Line