Factory production in UK hits two-decade high as exports grow

An employee adjusts an internal hub gear on a Brompton folding bicycle in the assembly area inside the Brompton Bicycle Ltd. factory in London, U.K., on Friday, May 13, 2016. The Brompton was created in 1975 by Andrew Ritchie, a Cambridge-trained engineer. Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg

Bloomberg

UK factory production reached a two-decade high last quarter as optimism about export orders swelled to the highest since the 1970s.
A Confederation of British Industry survey showed the volume of output rapidly grew in the three months to July, with the CBI index reaching its strongest reading since 1995.
Factories are “upbeat in their expectations for overall demand in the quarter ahead, but particularly for overseas demand,” which is driving stronger output, the report said. A gauge of expectations for export orders for the next three months climbed to the highest in 40 years.
Inflation pressures eased as a measure of domestic prices fell while export prices were unchanged. Both are expected to cool further in the coming three months. UK consumer-price inflation unexpectedly dropped to 2.6 percent in June from 2.9 percent in May.
With manufacturing accounting for about 10 percent of the economy, the strength shown
in the CBI numbers may only have a limited impact on gross domestic product. Data on Wednesday is forecast to show expansion of 0.3 percent in the second quarter, after 0.2 percent at the start of the year.

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