3 Numbers: UK Claimant Count To Tick Higher For 3rd Straight Month

 | Nov 16, 2016 01:28AM ET

  • Economists expect the UK claimant count to head higher
  • Robust consumer spending is supporting the UK economy, for now
  • A mild rebound is projected for US industrial production in October
  • US home builder confidence is on track to hold steady at strong rate
  • The UK labour market is in focus today, offering the crowd another update on how the country’s economy is faring in the wake of the Brexit vote in June. Later, two US numbers will be widely read for insight into how the macro trend may unfold as a new president gears up to move into the White House. First up is the October update on industrial production, followed by fresh data on sentiment in the home building industry for November.

    UK: Unemployment Report (0930 GMT): The number of new claimants for unemployment is expected to tick higher for the third month in a row in today’s October report from the government. If the forecast is right, the news may feed worries that economic fallout from Brexit threatens to spill over into the labour market in the months ahead.

    TradingEconomics.com advises that the consensus forecast calls for a modest increase of 2,000 in the claimant count for last month. That’s a trivial rise, but if the projection is accurate it’ll mark the third straight monthly increase.

    There are already hints that economic growth is slowing. The latest GDP estimate from the National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR), for example, points to a 0.4% increase for the three months through October. That’s still a respectable pace but it reflects the second downshift from the recent peak of a 0.7% rise in August.

    “Robust consumer spending growth continues to support the economy,” a researcher at NIESR said last week. “Looking ahead, this contribution from consumers is expected to wane over the course of next year due to a substantial rise in the rate of inflation", which is widely viewed as a byproduct of Brexit via a sharp devaluation in the pound.

    Today’s update on the claimant count doesn't appear set to deliver dark news per se, but it may offer more ammunition on the margins for those who think that the recent UK referendum to leave the European Union will come with an economic price tag in time.