Personal Wealth Management / Economics

UK GDP’s February in Perspective

Tariff frontrunning played a role, but UK GDP is in better shape than many appreciate.

Some positive economic news out of the UK last Friday: February GDP grew more than expected, and January’s -0.1% m/m dip was revised up to flat.[i] Pundits correctly added context behind the numbers (i.e., a surge in manufacturing was likely tied partly to tariff frontrunning), but some worry the UK’s near-term economic prospects look bleak due to the trade conflict. While February says nothing about the rest of the year, the underlying data show industries not affected directly by tariffs are holding up just fine. That implies the UK entered the global trade conflict on solid ground—not that there is much evidence tariffs would hit Britain particularly hard anyway.

February GDP rose 0.5% m/m, with growth across the three main economic sectors (services: 0.3%, production: 1.5% and construction: 0.4%).[ii] Manufacturing, a production subsector, grabbed headlines for its 2.2% m/m jump—the largest gain in 20 months—rebounding from January’s revised -1.0% slip.[iii] Manufacturing’s February expansion was broad-based, with 10 of 13 subsectors expanding—and computer, electronic and optical products, basic pharmaceutical products and pharmaceutical preparations and transport equipment leading the way.[iv]

Most coverage sensibly pointed out February’s manufacturing surge likely reflected companies building up inventory in preparation for US tariffs. The UK manufacturing subsets contributing most in February were industries in possible tariff crosshairs. Moreover, frontrunning has been commonplace worldwide—see recent Chinese exports and the eurozone’s January industrial production.

The UK was actually an anomaly in that regard, as its recent heavy industry data didn’t align with trends elsewhere. One likely influencing factor: UK manufacturing’s metals industry has been in a soft patch recently for domestic reasons. Production has been mixed due in part to the UK steel industry’s transition from blast furnaces to electric arc furnaces. The industry has long suffered under high energy costs and other headwinds, a problem highlighted again over the weekend as the UK government took control of British Steel’s Scunthorpe plant, the UK’s last “virgin steel” producer, which its ownership claimed was losing about £700 million per day and was planning to close.

Strong manufacturing aside, many observers claim gathering headwinds—namely, America’s trade policy and hikes to the UK’s minimum wage and Employer National Insurance Contribution (NIC)—will hinder the UK economy going forward. The supposed upshot: Big picture, UK growth still looks imperiled.

We agree a big-picture look can put things in perspective, yet when you actually take this on, you see Britain isn’t likely to experience a huge effect from American tariffs. Perhaps that sounds dismissive. But the UK faces only the 10% universal tariff and no “reciprocal” levies—even if they come back from the pause on other nations. Most of the UK’s exports are services, not goods, which aren’t subject to Trump’s tariffs. As for scale, on an individual country basis, America is the UK’s largest trading partner (accounting for 22% of exports and 13% of imports in 2023).[v] But the EU as a bloc is by far the UK’s most important trade relationship (accounting for 41% of UK exports and 51% of imports in 2023).[vi] US tariffs also wouldn’t prevent the UK from continuing to trade globally.

Then there are the ongoing negotiations between both sides. On Tuesday, US Vice President JD Vance said there was a “good chance” of reaching a trade deal with the UK, and while politicians’ words should always be taken with a grain of salt, it speaks to most countries’ apparent willingness to negotiate with the US. Meanwhile, the UK also announced a two-year suspension of dozens of tariffs this week, further demonstrating increased openness. As for the NIC hikes, they are an additional expense for businesses. But they also aren’t the big economic negative many fear, as companies can find ways to navigate those costs (e.g., reducing hours worked) to keep operations going.

What has gone overlooked amid manufacturing’s pop: the services sector’s ongoing growth. February activity rose in 9 of the 14 subsectors, and consumer-facing services climbed 0.7% m/m after a -0.1% dip in January.[vii] Now, tariff frontrunning may have contributed to February’s expansion, too. Wholesale and retail trade and repair of motor vehicles were among the month’s biggest contributors. Perhaps that reflected firms’ building up inventory or getting business done before tariffs take effect, which could lead to higher costs. But the more purely services parts of the sector look solid. The business services and finance industry has grown three straight months.[viii] Drilling down deeper, accommodation and food service activities and information and communication subindustries grew 1.4% m/m and 2.2%, respectively, in February.[ix] This isn’t solely a tariff frontrunning story.

Looking at the past couple years, services has relatively steadily grown as manufacturing waffled—a fully global trend. (Exhibit 1) The former isn’t expanding at a gangbusters rate. But the upward trend in a sector that comprises nearly 80% of GDP suggests the UK economy probably isn’t in the dire straits many fear.

Exhibit 1: UK Services and Manufacturing Indexes Over the Past Two Years

 

Source: Office for National Statistics, as of 4/14/2025. Index of Services and Index of Production (Manufacturing), February 2023 – February 2025.

Fear remains rampant today, and many presume tariffs will knock already weak growth in the UK and developed world more broadly. To us, that signals expectations are quite low—which means reality has a low bar to clear to beat expectations.

 



[i] Source: Office for National Statistics, as of 4/11/2025.

[ii] Ibid.

[iii] Ibid.

[iv] Ibid.

[v] “Geographical Pattern of UK Trade,” Matthew Ward, House of Commons Library, 12/13/2024.

[vi] Ibid.

[vii] See note i.

[viii] Ibid.

[ix] Ibid.


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*The content contained in this article represents only the opinions and viewpoints of the Fisher Investments editorial staff.

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