British Steel to get furnace supplies today, say ministers; UK wage growth remains resilient – business live

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Introduction: British Steel to get furnace supplies today, say ministers; UK wage growth remains resilient

Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.

Raw materials secured by the government will be transported to British Steel’s Scunthorpe plant today to keep its blast furnaces burning. Ministers have taken control of British Steel and and are a race against time to get materials such as coking coal and iron ore to the site.

The business secretary, Jonathan Reynolds, will visit the port in Immingham, North Lincolnshire, as supplies from two ships are unloaded and transported to the plant.

The materials, sent from the US, are enough to keep the furnaces running for weeks, the department for business and trade said, adding that they have been paid for out of its existing budget.

UK regular wage growth has picked up slightly, mainly due to pay rises in the public sector, while the unemployment rate was unchanged and vacancies fell.

The latest labour market snapshot from the Office for National Statistics shows that average weekly earnings rose by 5.9% between December and February from a year earlier excluding bonuses, up from 5.8% in the three months to January. Economists had forecast growth of 6%. Including bonuses, wage growth stayed at 5.6%.

Pay growth is closely watched by the Bank of England, which is trying to gauge whether inflation pressures in the labour market easing enough to allow it to cut interest rates further. Policymakers are also watching for the impact of Donald Trump’s tariffs on the economy.

The UK unemployment rate stayed at 4.4%, while the number of people on company payrolls fell by 78,000 between February and March.

Vacancies in the UK fell below pre-pandemic levels for the first time since the spring of 2021. They fell by 26,000 on the quarter, to 781,000 between January and March.

On the tariff front, US vice president JD Vance has said there is a good chance that the United States and the UK will strike a “great agreement” on trade because of Trump’s love of the country and its royal family.

There was also news last night that the Trump administration is kicking off investigations into imports of pharmaceuticals and semiconductors as part of a bid to impose tariffs on both sectors on national security grounds.

However, markets were cheered by the exemption of smartphones and laptops from the latest US tariffs on Chinese imports, although Trump insisted it was only temporary. There was further relief when the US president said he was exploring possible temporary exemptions to his tariffs on imported vehicles and parts, to give carmakers more time to set up US manufacturing.

He told reporters in the Oval Office:

I’m looking at something to help car companies with it. They’re switching to parts that were made in Canada, Mexico and other places, and they need a little bit of time, because they’re going to make them here.

The pan-European Stoxx Europe 600 index rallied by 2.7% yesterday, while the UK market rose by 2.1%. On Wall Street, the S&P 500 closed 0.8% higher, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq only held on to 0.6% of its earlier chunky gains.

This morning, stock futures are flat to slightly lower.

In Asia, shares were mixed. Japan’s Nikkei rose by 0.8% and South Korea’s Kospi by 0.9%, with strong gains for carmakers Toyota ( up 3.7%) and Honda (up 3.6%). Meanwhile, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng slipped by 0.16% and Chinese markets were also lower, down 0.1% in Shanghai and 0.5% in Shenzhen.

Analysts at Deutsche Bank said:

Markets continued to stabilise over the last 24 hours, with the S&P 500 posting back-to-back gains for the first time since the reciprocal tariffs were announced on April 2.

Whilst equities were recovering, arguably a bigger relief for investors was the recovery in the bond market, which eased fears about some sort of serious financial turmoil developing.

Investors had already been alarmed, and last week’s +49.5bp jump in the 10-year Treasury yield was the biggest weekly jump since 2001, with the yield moving higher every day last week.

However, that began to reverse yesterday, with the 10-year Treasury yield falling by nearly 12 basis points to 4.37%, and this morning it’s fallen further, by 2.3bps to 4.35%.

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Away from the tariffs, perhaps the biggest unanswered question in the UK economy is what the recent employer tax hikes mean for the jobs market.

Earlier this year, the mood music looked grim, as survey after survey painted a negative picture about hiring intentions and layoffs, said James Smith, developed markets economist at ING.

So far, there’s little sign of that in the labour market numbers.

“The UK jobs market is showing little sign of damage following this month’s hike in employers’ national insurance,” he concluded.

While the number of employees on company payrolls has fallen by 78,000, Smith noted that separate weekly data on redundancies from the government haven’t increased at all.

That could change, though we would have expected to see some pressure emerge ahead of the employer national insurance hike earlier in April.

Our working assumption, for now, is that the jobs market continues to cool this year, but that we don’t see a material spike in joblessness. And for the Bank of England, that keeps all the focus on wage growth…

The latest one-month and three-month changes in private-sector pay show that the pressure isn’t really abating. The latest rise in the National Living Wage will also keep pay growth supported through the spring.

Given what surveys show, we suspect wage growth will come lower through this year, but only very gradually. It’ll perhaps end the year in the 4.5-5% area.

That doesn’t mean the Bank of England can’t keep cutting rates, however. Services inflation, the Bank’s other major focus right now, should come lower in the coming months; we’ll get fresh data on that tomorrow. Coupled with heightened concerns about the global economy, it should keep the BoE on its current rhythm of gradual rate cuts once per quarter.

We expect a cut in May and two more in the second half of the year.

The British Chambers of Commerce said the high rate of wage growth was a big challenge for employers.

🗣️Deputy Director Public Policy @BCC_Jane: “The rising cost of employment is a major challenge for employers. While wage growth has eased once again, it continues to significantly outpace inflation.”

Read our response to the latest labour market data 👇https://t.co/EvQIzqnvYu

— BCC (@britishchambers) April 15, 2025

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