Annonce

Log ud Log ind
Log ud Log ind

Frygtelig britisk jobrapport rejser tvivl om behovet for renteforhøjelser

Oscar M. Stefansen

tirsdag 19. maj 2026 kl. 9:21

Resume af teksten:

Den seneste britiske jobrapport viser stigende arbejdsløshed, faldende lønvækst og et markant fald i beskæftigelsen. Arbejdsløsheden er steget med 0,1 procentpoint til 5,0%. Lønvæksten viser en tre måneders årlig ændring på 0,6%, den laveste siden 2015, hvilket tyder på en nedadgående tendens. Beskæftigelsen er faldet med 100.000, men dette tal kan blive revideret. Forbrugsrelaterede sektorer er særligt påvirket, forværret af sidste års skatte- og mindstelønsforhøjelser samt det kommende energichok. Rapporten stiller spørgsmålstegn ved nødvendigheden af yderligere renteforhøjelser fra Bank of England, trods forventninger om en renteforhøjelse i juni. Den fremtidige beslutning afhænger også af den kommende inflationsdata.

Fra ING:

The latest UK jobs report, which features rising unemployment, sharply lower payrolls and tumbling wage growth, is a reminder that the economy is much less susceptible to ‘second round’ effects from the incoming energy shock. We’re still forecasting a rate hike in June, but that is far from guaranteed

The UK unemployment rate has picked up a tenth of a percentage point to 5.0%

The UK unemployment rate has picked up a tenth of a percentage point to 5.0%

Ouch! Taken at face value, the latest UK jobs report is bad pretty much wherever you look.

Admittedly, some of it looks more like noise than signal. Take the 100,000 drop in payrolled employment. That is a big number, but one that will almost certainly get revised up. We saw something similar last May, where an initially reported 109k drop was then revised up to a much more modest -14k decline. There are plenty of similar examples in recent history.

Still, backward revisions to both February and March are a reminder that the situation is fragile. Weakness has been particularly concentrated in consumer-facing sectors most affected by last year’s tax and minimum wage hikes. That pressure is only likely to be exacerbated by the incoming energy shock.

Payroll employment has been particularly weak in consumer services

- Source: Macrobond, ING

Source: Macrobond, ING

Then there’s the unemployment rate, which picked up a tenth of a percentage point to 5.0%. Again, this has been bouncing around for the past couple of readings owing to volatility surrounding people recorded as unemployed and inactive. Given long-running issues with data quality and the Labour Force Survey, which is the source of the unemployment rate, we’re still inclined to take this with a heavy pinch of salt.

What really stands out here though is wage growth. Just look at the three-month annualised change in private pay – a mere 0.6%. By our reckoning, that’s the lowest figure since 2015. This does bounce around and almost certainly exaggerates the true picture. But at the very least, it says the near-term direction of private sector wage growth is lower. This is set to fall below 3% in the coming months.

Wage growth is slowing rapidly

- Source: Macrobond, ING

Source: Macrobond, ING

All of this questions the need for Bank of England rate hikes. The economy looks much less susceptible to “second round” effects from higher energy prices on things like wage growth than it did four years ago in the last oil/gas shock.

Following the April BoE meeting, we’ve tentatively been forecasting a one-and-done rate hike in June. That remains our base case, mainly because our house view on energy prices, particularly for natural gas, and given that the Strait of Hormuz is showing little sign of reopening. But it’s a close call, and we remain open-minded about next month’s meeting. A lot will also depend on tomorrow’s inflation data.

Hurtige nyheder er stadig i beta-fasen, og fejl kan derfor forekomme.

Få dagens vigtigste
økonominyheder hver dag kl. 12

Bliv opdateret på aktiemarkedets bevægelser, skarpe indsigter
og nyeste tendenser fra Økonomisk Ugebrev – helt gratis.

Jeg giver samtykke til, at I sender mig mails med de seneste historier fra Økonomisk Ugebrev.  Lejlighedsvis må I gerne sende mig gode tilbud og information om events. Samtidig accepterer jeg ØU’s Privatlivspolitik. Du kan til enhver tid afmelde dig med et enkelt klik.

[postviewcount]

Jobannoncer

Consultant til Strategisk Finans til Tryg
Region Hovedstaden
Financial Controller til Koncernøkonomi på Sluseholmen
Region Hovedstaden
Direktør for Staben i Holstebro Kommune
Region Midt
Økonomikonsulent til Finans og Regnskab
Region Hovedstaden
Chef for Budget og Økonomisk analyse
Region Hovedstaden
Controller – til vores dygtige og samarbejdende controllerteam
Region Sjælland
Business Risk Officer til Koncernfinans
Region Hovedstaden
Group Finance Manager
Region Nordjylland
Afdelingschef til Erhvervs- og Handelsafdelingen
Grønland
Ny kollega til økonomisk regulering af monopoler
Region Hovedstaden
Souschef til Økonomi, Drift og Sikkerhed i Miljø- og Ligestillingsministeriets departement
Region Hovedstaden
Økonomi- og Budgetcontroller til Region Hovedstadens Apotek- Herlev
Region Hovedstaden
Business Partnere til Koncern Indkøb, Region Sjælland, Roskilde
Region Sjælland
Økonomimedarbejder til finansteamet i Esbjerg Kommune
Region Syddanmark
Leder af Økonomi & Indkøb – Albertslund Kommune
Region Hovedstaden

Log ind

Har du ikke allerede en bruger? Opret dig her.

FÅ VORES STORE NYTÅRSUDGAVE AF FORMUE

Her er de 10 bedste aktier i 2022

Tilbuddet udløber om:
dage
timer
min.
sek.

Analyse af og prognoser for Fixed Income (statsrenter og realkreditrenter)

Direkte adgang til opdaterede analyser fra toneangivende finanshuse:

Goldman Sachs

Fidelity

Danske Bank

Morgan Stanley

ABN Amro

Jyske Bank

UBS

SEB

Natixis

Handelsbanken

Merril Lynch 

Direkte adgang til realkreditinstitutternes renteprognoser:

Nykredit

Realkredit Danmark

Nordea

Analyse og prognoser for kort rente, samt for centralbankernes politikker

Links:

RBC

Capital Economics

Yardeni – Central Bank Balance Sheet 

Investing.com: FED Watch Monitor Tool

Nordea

Scotiabank