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MNI 5 Things: Forties Reopening Sets Up UK IOP January Rebound

MNI (London)
Repeats Story Initially Transmitted at 10:36 GMT Mar 8/05:36 EST Mar 8
--UK January Short Term Indicators Data Due for Release Friday
by Jamie Satchi
     LONDON (MNI) - Ahead of the UK January Industrial Production (IOP),
Manufacturing, Construction output and Trade data will be release, we outline
five themes for particular attention.
-Pencil in a Double-Digit Rebound in Mining and Quarrying Output. 
     With the Forties Pipeline System (FPS) back in business in January a
sizeable rebound in mining and quarrying output is widely anticipated. Output
tanked 19.1% m/m in December and a near-equal and opposite outturn could be on
the cards for January. As such, analysts polled by MNI envisage a 1.5% m/m rise
in IOP output, following December's 1.3% drop, while also forecasting
manufacturing to expand for a ninth straight month.
-Surveys Signal Resilience. 
     Both the CBI Industrial Trends Survey (ITS) and the IHS Markit
Manufacturing PMI pointed to resilience in the manufacturing sector in January.
The PMI, though did moderate below analysts' expectations to 55.3, remained well
above the long-term average of 51.7 and suggested demand remained sound. The
ITS, on the other hand, was slightly more bullish, reporting incoming export
orders expanding at a pace last seen higher in April 2011 in the three months to
January.
-Trade Deficit to Narrow. 
     The marked widening in the trade deficit in December was due to two factors
-- higher imported fuel prices and lower fuel export volumes. Much of this was
induced by the Forties closure while movements in erratic components like
non-monetary gold also played a part. These forces should have unwound to some
degree in January, helping to bring down the overall deficit. Fuel prices,
however, did remain elevated in January and will provide continue to a drag on
any narrowing effect. Still, the overall picture is one absent of any material
improvement in the trade balance since the sterling slide -- yes, goods exports
have risen, the only issue is that imports have too.
-Record Car Exports Will Support Trade. 
     The 119,252 count of UK-built cars destined for foreign shores in January
was the highest since records began back in 1987, (non-seasonally adjusted) data
from the SMMT showed. Consequently, total car manufacturing was broadly
unchanged from last January's nine-year year and this should support the
manufacturing component of IOP as well as the visible trade balance. Cars
(9.5%), the UK's second biggest export product, and other road vehicles (2.3%)
account for just over a tenth of total UK exports.
-One-off Shocks to Distort Q1 GDP Data. 
     The Forties closure and February's arctic-like chill will make the Bank of
England's task of trying to gauge underlying UK growth in Q1 slightly more
difficult. Given the former occurred in December last year, contributing to a
downgrade in Q4 growth, we know the recovery in the January data will aid Q1
GDP. In contrast, given the 'Beast from the East' arrived in the UK late in
February, the associated hit and rebound will largely be captured in the Q1
data. Thus, the net impact of these two unanticipated shocks will aid the calls
of either the hawks or doves, we just don't know who yet.
     The MNI median expectations, taken from a poll of analysts, are shown in
the table below.
           Jan       Jan
      Industri  Industri         Jan          Jan         Jan     Jan        Jan
            al        al  Manufactur  Manufacturi  Constructi   Trade    Visible
      Producti  Producti         ing           ng          on  Balanc      Trade
            on        on      Output       Output      Output       e    Balance
         % M/M     % Y/Y       % M/M        % Y/Y       % M/M  Stg bn     Stg bn
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MNI
Medi
an        +1.5      +2.5        +0.2         +2.8        -0.5    -3.3      -11.9
Prio
r         -1.3       0.0        +0.3         +1.4        +1.6    -4.9      -13.6
--MNI London Bureau; tel: +44 203-586-2225; email: les.commons@marketnews.com
MNI London Bureau | +44 203-865-3812 | les.commons@marketnews.com
MNI London Bureau | +44 203-865-3812 | les.commons@marketnews.com

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