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The March inflation print came in hotter than expected at 3.2% against market forecasts of 3.1%, though this still makes for the lowest year-on-year rate since August 2021.
Annual core inflation (which is a better indicator of consumer income pressures) slowed to 4.2% in March, the lowest since December 2021 and down from 4.5% in February.
https://www.proactiveinvestors.co.uk/companies/news/1045467/uk-inflation-falls-at-a-snail-s-pace-1045467.html
On a quarter-on-quarter basis, China's GDP grew 1.6% in the first quarter, compared to a Reuters poll expectations of 1.4% and a revised fourth quarter expansion of 1.2%.
Growth was driven in part by external demand, as export volume grew by 14% year on year, said Zhiwei Zhang, president and chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.cnbc.com/amp/2024/04/16/chinas-q1-gdp-grew-5point3percent-in-the-first-quarter-beating-expectations.html
Wage growth eased slower than expected, but unemployment posted a surprising large jump, as the Bank of England considers when to start cutting interest rates.
Annual pay growth including bonuses averaged 5.6 per cent between December and February, according to figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS), unchanged from 5.6 per cent last month and slightly ahead of expectations.
Excluding bonuses, pay growth eased to six per cent per cent from 6.1 per cent previously. Economists had expected it to fall below six per cent.
https://www.cityam.com/wage-growth-slightly-hotter-than-expected-as-bank-of-england-considers-interest-rate-cuts/
Hercules Site Services cements labour supply partnership with Costain
Https://www.proactiveinvestors.co.uk/LON:BOOM/Audioboom-Group-PLC/rns/1451191
Financial and operating highlights
· Q1 revenue of US$17.1 million, up 11% on Q1 2023 (US$15.4 million). The positive momentum of Q4 2023 has continued with the second successive quarter of year-on-year revenue growth Revenue growth has accelerated in this period (Q4 2023: 5% up on Q4 2022) and the Company expects further acceleration in revenue growth rate through upcoming quarters
· March revenue of US$6.7 million represented the highest revenue month for the Company since May 2022
Ninety One's Ben Needham says Lloyds should offer investors 'an excellent cash return story' in the coming years.
This will come in the form of a compelling dividend (2.76p a share in the 2023 financial year) and a strong share price return, driven in part by the company buying back its shares (reducing the number in issue), so increasing the chance of the shares going up in price.
'At the current share price,' says Needham, 'Lloyds shares should generate mid-teen annual returns for investors.'
Another Lloyds fan is Interactive Investor's Richard Hunter. He says the bank's move to a more digital business (closing offices and branches) will 'reap rewards' in the form of improved margins (bigger profits).
He is also encouraged by the bank returning to its previous reputation as a 'provider of large shareholder returns.' A 'progressive' dividend policy, adds Hunter, has resulted in an annual dividend equivalent to 5.4 per cent – 'tempting for income seeking investors.'
https://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/investing/article-13304215/20-dirt-cheap-British-stocks-experts-say-make-fortune.html?ico=mol_mobile_money-newtab&molReferrerUrl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.dailymail.co.uk%2Fmoney%2Findex.html&_ga=2.32726583.807147711.1713091173-1807238911.1696185645&_gl=1*jo41zx*_ga*MTgwNzIzODkxMS4xNjk2MTg1NjQ1*_ga_XE0XLFFF16*MTcxMzA5MTE3My4xMTMuMS4xNzEzMDkxOTU0LjAuMC4w
Aston Martin's boss was handed £1.3million to commute weekly from Italy to the Midlands by private jet, fuelling the row over boardroom excess.
Aston Martin flies into a storm over fat cat perks https://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/markets/article-13304263/Aston-Martin-flies-storm-fat-cat-perks.html?ito=native_share_article-nativemenubutton
How this 'Great Fat Lie' has become a Big Fat Truth: Remainers scorned the claim Brexit would give an extra £350m a week to the NHS. In fact, it's now getting an extra £710m,
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-13304953/amp/remainers-brexit-extra-350-nhs-ross-clark.html
Aston Martin's boss said a net zero ban on petrol cars would be "premature" due to the current weakened demand for electric vehicles.
Lawrence Stroll, the Canadian billionaire and owner of Aston Martin, believes any push towards EVs will be based on "hype" rather than real demand.
He reckons most consumers don't want electric vehicles no matter the incentives offered by governments.
A lack of electric vehicle charging points is partly to blame, Stroll argued.
The UK has begun upping the number of EV charging points after reports earlier this year revealed drivers don't believe the network is fit for purpose.
Luxury and supercar makers also have been watering down plans for a switch to fully electric ranges after the EU and UK pushed back deadlines for a complete switchover until 2035.
In February, Mercedes-Benz said it would still be producing petrol-fuelled cars well into the 2030s despite the targets set for carbon transformation.
https://www.proactiveinvestors.co.uk/companies/news/1045088/aston-martin-boss-warns-about-premature-ban-on-petrol-cars-1045088.html
UK markets are predicting the first rate cut will come in September rather than August, but will still be 0.25%, analysts said.
Neil Wilson, chief market analyst at Finalto, said the changes in expectations came after the release of a hotter-than-expected US inflation reading, which sent the treasury market into a tizzy.
https://www.proactiveinvestors.co.uk/companies/news/1045074/uk-rate-cut-to-come-in-september-not-august-says-analysts-1045074.html
Not even China can help Australia's commodity exports
https://www.reuters.com/markets/commodities/not-even-china-can-help-australias-commodity-exports-russell-2024-04-10/
Best thing AML did getting out of electric vehicles the future is hydrogen
https://myelectricsparks.com/bmw-hydrogen-engines/?fbclid=IwAR0usn1x7GaWpFMfUnbNDX6bah5-LxAq8q2kl-t1QMTyzO2ws9evmU9jhcs
Analysts "cannot understate the importance of today's US inflation" reading as it's expected to affect markets on both sides of the Atlantic.
Kathleen Brooks at XTB noted that European stocks were trading higher ahead of the inflation data, lifted by company earnings and treasury yields falling.
Nevertheless, the broker's research director reckons investors are already "positioned for bad news", building on the negativity of having to wait until September for an interest rate cut.
Inflation data will be released at 1.30 pm GMT and is predicted to have sped up to 3.4% in March, with core inflation slowing to 3.7%.