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UK economy beats forecasts with 0.3% growth in November; Ofwat investigating South East Water over outages – business live | Business

UK economy grew by 0.3% in November

Newsflash: The UK economy has returned to growth, and more vigorously than expected.

UK GDP expanded by 0.3% in November, new data from the Office for National Statistics shows, after shrinking a little in October.

That’s faster than expected; City economists had expected growth of just 0.1%

In another boost, September’s growth figures have been revised higher, showing that the economy didn’t shrink that month after all.

The ONS says:

Monthly GDP is estimated to have grown by 0.3%, following an unrevised fall of 0.1% in October 2025 and a growth of 0.1% in September 2025 (revised up from our initial estimate of a fall of 0.1%).

More to follow….

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The UK’s stronger-than-expected growth in November is fanning away fears that the economy shrank in the October-December quarter.

Thomas Pugh, chief economist at audit, tax and consulting firm RSM UK, suspects the economy stagnated in Q4, saying:

“The 0.3% m/m rebound in output in November, along with the upward revisions to the monthly data, mean the risk that the economy outright contracted in Q4 has sharply receded.

However, we doubt the economy did little more than stagnate in Q4, as the initial data for December has been weak, and doctor’s strikes will add to the drag on growth. Things should pick up in Q1 of this year though, as activity postponed ahead of the budget comes through, and the impact of strikes and the Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) cyber-attack fades.

“The stronger-than-expected outturn in November will also further dent any chances of a back-to-back rate cut in February. We doubt the next rate cut will come until April.

The money markets indicate there’s just a 7% chance of a rate cut in February, with a cut not fully priced in until June.

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