FINWIRES · TerminalLIVE
FINWIRES

UK GDP Growth Beats Forecasts in February Amid Services Strength

-- The UK recorded a higher-than-expected gross domestic product growth in February, supported by higher month-over-month output in the services, production, and construction industries.

The country's monthly real GDP rose 0.5% in February, following an upwardly revised 0.1% growth in January, according to data from the Office for National Statistics published Thursday. The latest figure came in above the consensus estimate of a 0.1% uptick.

Annually, the British economy expanded by 1%, against the revised 0.7% gain and the expected 0.6% rise. In the quarter to February 2026, UK GDP edged up 0.5%, compared with the three months ended November 2025, mainly driven by broad-based growth in the services sector.

"Within services, growth was driven by wholesaling, market research, hospitality, and publishing, which all performed well in the three months to February. Meanwhile car production recovered from the effects of the autumn cyber incident," ONS Chief Economist Grant Fitzner said. "Growth in services and production was partially offset by another fall in construction, albeit at a slower rate than previously, with leasing and intellectual property licensing also continuing to contract."

ONS data showed that monthly output in the services and production sectors both grew 0.5% in February, after a revised 0.1% gain and a 0.1% decline in January, respectively. Meanwhile, the construction industry saw a 1% increase in output, following a revised increase of 0.5% previously.

"UK output surged in February, but it's in line with a trend dating back to 2022, where growth is stronger in the first quarter than across the rest of the year. We're taking this latest data with a pinch of salt," ING said, noting that the apparent increase looks "too good to be true" and the outlook for the British economy points to a slowdown amid the ongoing war in the Middle East. "Growth is likely to slow regardless into the summer as inflation rises towards 4% beyond July."

The research firm added that it remains unconvinced that the Bank of England will increase its key rate in 2026 amid higher energy prices and expectations of a decline in real wages.

"It's a close call, which becomes closer still if the disruption hasn't materially improved by the time of the June meeting. But for now, we're looking for rates to stay unchanged at 3.75% throughout 2026," ING said.

The BoE is scheduled to hold its next monetary policy meeting on April 30.

Related Articles

Asia

Adisyn Secures Rights to Commercialize Graphene-Based Stealth Technology

Adisyn (ASX:AI1) said 2D Generation's subsidiary, 2D Radar Absorbers, signed a license and research agreement with Ramot, the technology transfer company of Israel's Tel Aviv University, for the exclusive rights to commercialize graphene-based radar signature reduction or stealth technology, according to a Wednesday filing with the Australian bourse.The technology combines graphene and other 2D materials in composite materials to minimize radar detectability by absorbing and dissipating electromagnetic signals, the filing said.The deal includes a 12-month company-funded research program with Tel Aviv University, expected to cost less than AU$100,000, per the filing.

$ASX:AI1
International

Japan's Trade Surplus Expands in March as Exports to China, US Jump

Japan's trade surplus expanded to nearly 667 billion yen in March from 529.8 billion yen a year earlier as exports outpaced imports, data from the Ministry of Finance on Wednesday showed.Exports during the month climbed 11.7% to 11.003 trillion yen from 9.852 trillion yen, after shipments to its two largest trading partners, China and the US, rose 17.7% and 3.4%, respectively.This March export reading is triple that of the export growth of 4% the month prior.Exports to the Middle East plunged 45.9% while imports fell 10.7%, as the Iran war effectively shut the Strait of Hormuz, a vital waterway for Japan's oil imports from the region.Overall imports, meanwhile, grew 10.9% on year to 10.336 trillion yen from 9.322 trillion yen, boosted mostly by imports from Asian nations.

$^N225
Asia

Meteoric Resources to Raise AU$40 Million via Share Placement; Shares Up 15%

Meteoric Resources (ASX:MEI) received firm commitments to raise AU$40 million through the placement of about 235.3 million new shares at an AU$0.17 apiece, according to a Wednesday filing with the Australian bourse.Proceeds will be used to advance the company's Caldeira project in Brazil towards a final investment decision, the filing said.Shares rose nearly 15% in morning trade Wednesday.

$ASX:MEI