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UK Business Sentiment Edges Up in May, Lloyds says

LONDON, May 29 (Reuters) - British business sentiment edged up in May and is now close to its level before ​the Iran war, according to a monthly survey ‌by Lloyds on Friday which contrasted with most other measures of business and consumer sentiment.

"Businesses in May were more ​optimistic about their own trading prospects, with two ​thirds expecting stronger output over the year ahead," ⁠said Hann-Ju Ho, a senior economist at Lloyds ​Commercial Banking.

Following are other points from the report and ​broader context:

  • Business confidence rose 3 points in May to +47, close to its 12-month average of +48 and above the long-run average of +30 ​since the survey began in 2002

  • Businesses' confidence in ​their own trading outlook rose 4 points to +58

  • Confidence in the wider ‌economy ⁠rose 2 points to +35

  • Rising inflation and cost pressures, economic uncertainty and weaker customer demand were the main negative factors

  • Confidence among construction firms showed a 15-point jump ​to +44 in May, ​close to ⁠its 12-month average

  • Retail improved 8 points to +53, services were unchanged at +45 and manufacturing ​fell 4 points to +43

  • Previously released preliminary PMI data ​for UK ⁠businesses fell to the lowest in more than a year in May

  • Lloyds' data was based on online polling ⁠by ​Ipsos of 1,200 companies with ​annual sales of at least £250,000 ($336,000), conducted from April 30 to May 18

($1 = ​0.7440 pounds)

Reporting by David Milliken; editing by William Schomberg

Source: Reuters


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