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BUSINESS LIVE: UK GDP flatlined in April; DFS makes revenue warning

The UK economy failed to grow in April as poor weather hurt consumer spending, according to the Office for National Statistics. 

Among the companies with reports and trading updates today are DFS, Legal & General, Safestore, Checkit, and Frontier Developments. Read the Wednesday 13 June Business Live blog below.

> If you are using our app or a third-party site click here to read Business Live 

Sterling hits highest level against the euro since August 2022

The pound has continued its solid gains against the euro since the start of the year this week, with sterling now trading at a 22-month high against the eurozone currency.

Sterling overcame an initial dip in the wake of a higher UK unemployment rate to add nearly 0.3 per cent against the euro to €1.19 yesterday, having risen by around 2.8 per cent since the start of 2024.

Voters call for huge cuts in energy bills for the most vulnerable

Voters have called on the next government to help the most vulnerable with their energy bills.

Almost two-thirds (57 per cent) of the public want to see a social tariff launched to offer cheaper energy to those in real need, according to campaign group Warm This Winter.

‘‘Rain stopped play’ is the best way to describe things’

Danni Hewson, head of financial analysis at AJ Bell, comments on the latest UK GDP figures:

“April’s lack of growth should come as no surprise. ‘Rain stopped play’ is the best way to describe things as builders shunned roof tops and shoppers deserted high streets in favour of their warm, dry sofas.

“The long-term trend for construction is more worrying. Output has fallen for three consecutive months and there’s little surprise that so much focus has been placed on housebuilding by political parties, all hoping their policies can deliver a sustained growth spurt for the UK.

“But no growth is better than negative growth and taken alongside the latest wage figures there doesn’t appear to be much evidence to suggest that Bank of England ratesetters will feel ready to change course quite yet.

And there’s already a frisson of excitement in the air that big events like the Euros and Taylor Swift’s Eras tour will help deliver a decent boost to the economic picture by the time we get the half-year result.

Temu is famous for rock-bottom prices – But there are some big catches

With summer finally approaching, I was keen to buy a cheap desk fan to keep me cool.

If you pop into John Lewis, the cheapest one you can find is £15; on Amazon you can get one for £12.99.

Severn Trent boss pockets a £3.2m bonus despite rising sewage spills

Severn Trent’s boss raked in £3.2million in the last financial year after pocketing a bumper bonus despite rising sewage spills.

Amid a crisis engulfing the water industry, Liv Garfield was handed a £584,000 bonus on top of her £799,600 base salary.

MARKET REPORT: Oxford Instruments rises as it snaps up £15m rival

Oxford Instruments surged ahead as it closed in on the takeover of a rival and outlined plans to restructure its business.

The FTSE 250 firm, which makes and sells X-ray cameras, microscopes and magnets to academic researchers and commercial customers, is buying a Zurich-based company for £15million.

London listing is easy as Raspberry PI: Shares soar 42% on debut

Raspberry Pi shares soared by more than 40 per cent yesterday on a bumper debut on the London stock market.

The Cambridge-based computer-maker listed at 280p a share to give it a value of £542million.

UK economy stagnated in April, official data shows

The UK economy recorded no growth in April, according to the Office for National Statistics.

Gross domestic product (GDP) was flat during the month, following growth of 0.4 per cent in March, the ONS said.

GDP hit by weak construction sector

UK GDP failed to grow in April

Nicholas Hyett, investment manager at Wealth Club, comments on the altest UK GDP figures:

The market had low expectations for the UK economy in April, and it duly delivered.

Economic growth was flat, held back by a third month in a row of contraction in the construction industry and weakness in the manufacturing sector. Admittedly the numbers aren’t helped by rain that was 155% of the long term average.

That will be no surprise to anyone who’s lived through the wet and gloomy start to 2024, but has nonetheless severely dented output in house building and associated industries. After strong growth in March it’s a return to a less than compelling trend.

In an election month, where every data release will be being watched closely, there’s little here to change the narrative.