UK consumers save more as they brace for tougher times, GfK says
The consumer confidence index from market research firm GfK dipped to -19 in July from a six-month high of -18 in June.
Economists polled by Reuters had mostly expected a reading of -20.
'The data suggests that some people may be sensing stormy conditions ahead,' Neil Bellamy, consumer insights director at GfK, said.
'With speculation growing over possible tax rises in the Autumn budget, and price pressure contributing not just to higher inflation already but also to the likelihood of worse inflation to come, the news is worrying.'
Finance minister Rachel Reeves is expected to raise taxes for a second year in a row in her next annual budget plan after Prime Minister Keir Starmer was forced into u-turns on plans to save billions of pounds on welfare spending.
GfK's savings index, which is not part of its headline confidence gauge, jumped seven points to +34, its highest level since November 2007, shortly before the global financial crisis deepened.
Official retail sales data for June, due at 0600 GMT, are expected to show a rise in sales volumes after a sharp fall in May, according to the economists polled by Reuters. REUTERS

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
8 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Trump says Wall Street Journal, Murdoch want to settle defamation lawsuit
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox FILE PHOTO: Rupert Murdoch looks on, at the White House, in Washington, U.S. February 3, 2025. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz/File Photo WASHINGTON - Donald Trump said on Tuesday the Wall Street Journal and its billionaire owner Rupert Murdoch want to settle the U.S. president's defamation lawsuit against the newspaper. On July 18, Trump sued the Journal and its owners, including Murdoch, over a story, which said Trump's name was on a birthday greeting for late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, that included a sexually suggestive drawing and a reference to shared secrets. "I've been treated badly by the Wall Street Journal. I would have assumed that Rupert Murdoch controls it, but, you know, maybe does, maybe doesn't," Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One. "They are talking to us about doing something but we'll see what happens. Maybe they would like us to drop that, so we'll they're having, they want to settle it," he said, adding, "when I get treated unfairly, I do things about it." Trump's lawsuit called the alleged birthday greeting "fake" and said the Journal published its article to harm the president's reputation. In a court filing on Monday, Trump asked a U.S. court to order a swift deposition for Murdoch. The Wall Street Journal did not immediately respond to a request for comment. REUTERS


CNA
2 hours ago
- CNA
US Fed opens policy meeting, set to hold rates steady
WASHINGTON: The US Federal Reserve opened its two-day policy meeting on Tuesday (Jul 29), with the central bank widely expected to hold off on further interest rate cuts despite fierce political pressure from President Donald Trump to slash levels. Fed policymakers have kept the benchmark lending rate unchanged since their last rate reduction in December, as officials wait for clarity on how Trump's tariffs are impacting the world's biggest economy. Their patient approach has riled the president, who has chastised Fed Chair Jerome Powell on multiple occasions, calling him a 'numbskull' and a 'moron.' On Tuesday, the Fed said in a statement that its policy meeting started at 9am US Eastern time (1300 GMT) as scheduled. The case for holding interest rates steady at a range between 4.25 per cent and 4.50 per cent this week has been made by several Fed speakers, said JP Morgan chief US economist Michael Feroli in a recent note. Inflation remains above the Fed's longer-term target of 2 per cent, risks still persist, and the labour market is near full employment, he added. CENTRAL BANK SEEN HOLDING STEADY DESPITE TRUMP CRITICISM, INTERNAL DIVISIONS The Fed has signalled it is waiting on the effects of Trump's sweeping tariffs on allies and competitors alike to begin to show up in economic data. As the central bank mulls changes to monetary policy, officials are seeking a balance between price stability and maximum employment. Analysts are expecting to see some dissent from Fed policymakers at the end of their meeting Wednesday, given that a couple of officials have signalled openness to rate cuts as soon as in July. 'It will be interesting to watch whether Powell alludes to some potential policy easing before year-end,' or if he avoids explicit forward guidance given differences among the Fed's rate-setting committee, said EY chief economist Gregory Daco. 'With no imminent need to act, and a fractured FOMC facing asymmetric risks, the Fed will likely wait until September to deliver the next 25 basis points rate cut,' Daco added, referring to the Federal Open Market Committee. The Fed said Governor Adriana Kugler would not be attending the meeting 'due to a personal matter.'


CNA
2 hours ago
- CNA
Russia says Aeroflot has recovered from cyberattack, but dozens more flights cancelled
Russian airline Aeroflot cancelled dozens more flights on Tuesday but said it had now stabilised its schedule after a major cyberattack a day earlier, and the transport ministry said the issue had been resolved. Two pro-Ukraine hacking groups claimed on Monday to have carried out a year-long operation to penetrate Aeroflot's network. They said they had crippled 7,000 servers, extracted data on passengers and employees and gained control over the personal computers of staff, including senior managers. Aeroflot's online timetable showed about 25 flights out of Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport had been cancelled on Tuesday, mostly overnight and through the morning. Nearly all afternoon and evening flights were due to take off, though dozens were delayed. Interfax news agency said 31 inbound flights to the capital had been cancelled. Aeroflot said it had "stabilised" its flight programme. The transport ministry said in a statement: "Thanks to the efforts of Aeroflot employees, with the active support of Sheremetyevo services, the problem that arose was resolved in the shortest possible time." The ministry described the issue as "a failure in the IT infrastructure". It did not refer to it as a cyberattack, although prosecutors have said they are investigating it as such. Responsibility was claimed by the Belarusian Cyber Partisans, a long-established group that opposes President Alexander Lukashenko, and by a more shadowy and recent hacking outfit that calls itself Silent Crow. 'SAVING FACE' Yuliana Shemetovets, a spokesperson for the Cyber Partisans, said Aeroflot was likely working with costly manual systems in order to maintain the appearance of business as usual. The ministry statement said there had been a "transition to domestic systems". "Without IT systems the company can work manually like in the old days when flight tickets cost more than $1K," Shemetovets told Reuters. "It would just be unprofitable, meaning the company would keep sustaining losses just to save face." She said that Aeroflot's CEO had not changed his password since 2022 and that the company was using an outdated version of Windows software. Some workers had passwords saved in a Word document on their computers, she added. Reuters could not independently confirm those details and has approached Aeroflot for comment. Aeroflot's shares were up 1.36 per cent on Tuesday, recovering some ground after slumping to their lowest mark since late 2024 on Monday. Russian lawmakers said the cyberattack was a wake-up call and that investigators should focus not only on the perpetrators but on those who had allowed it to happen. Mikhail Klimarev, director of the Internet Protection Society, a Russian digital rights group, said it was a serious episode that showed cybercriminals were learning "best practice" from around the world while Russian companies were hampered in their response because of sanctions. "It's like with viruses: If you don't communicate with people who have the flu, you have no immunity," he told Reuters. Klimarev said Russian security services had dropped the ball, and the incident highlighted a failure of the technical systems that are meant to allow them to counter such threats. He said there was a grave safety risk as the hackers could hypothetically have exploited their access to Aeroflot systems in order to change data and cause planes to crash.