UK GDP falls 0.1% in April as services weigh on monthly growth

UK GDP falls 0.1% in April as services weigh on monthly growth
Rivanshi Rakhrai
12 Jun 2026, 08:11 AM

powered by

Invezz
Buy UK energy-inflation beneficiaries

Energy costs are the transmission mechanism: higher oil/shipping disruption lifts input prices and supports pricing power for parts of the energy value chain. Buy UK-listed integrated energy producers (e.g., BP) and/or North Sea service/production names that benefit from higher nominal energy prices and capex resilience. Thesis: the conflict keeps energy-linked earnings supported even as growth slows.

Key Risk: A rapid oil-price drop or policy-driven windfall/price controls compress margins and erase the earnings support.

Short GBP/USD

UK GDP -0.1% and services -0.2% confirm energy-driven slowdown risk. With the energy price cap rising and Q2 shrink fears, rate-cut odds rise and the modest GBP bounce fades. Sell GBP/USD (or buy USD/GBP) targeting a move back below 1.33 as inflation/labour data reinforce weak demand.

Key Risk: Inflation prints hotter than expected and forces the BoE to stay hawkish, pushing GBP higher despite weak growth.

  • UK economy shrank 0.1% in April after March growth.
  • Rising energy costs linked to conflict pressure economic activity.
  • Pound recovers losses despite weak GDP and growth concerns.

The UK economy contracted by 0.1% in April, reversing part of the strong growth recorded earlier in the year as rising energy costs and geopolitical tensions began to weigh on economic activity, according to official data.

Figures released by the Office for National Statistics showed that gross domestic product declined by 0.1% during the month, following a 0.3% increase in March.

The contraction was in line with economists' expectations and has added to concerns that the economy could shrink during the second quarter of the year.

The downturn comes as higher energy prices linked to the conflict involving Iran have started to affect economic conditions.

The closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a key global shipping route, has contributed to increased costs and growing uncertainty for businesses and consumers.

According to the ONS, the April contraction was primarily driven by weakness in the services sector, which recorded a 0.2% decline during the month.

The agency said weaker activity in public administration, as well as the arts, entertainment, and recreation sector, contributed significantly to the fall in services output.

Construction activity provided some support to the economy, rising by 0.1% during the month.

However, the ONS noted that the increase was entirely due to repair and maintenance work.

New construction work fell by 0.3%, despite the government's commitment to accelerate building activity and its pledge to deliver 1.5 million new homes.

Longer-term growth remains positive

Despite the monthly decline, broader economic performance remained positive.

Over the three months to April, GDP expanded by 0.7%, according to the ONS.

This longer-term measure is generally considered less volatile than monthly data and suggests that economic activity remained stronger than a single month's figure would indicate.

However, economists have increasingly lowered their growth forecasts for major economies, including the UK, amid concerns that higher oil and energy prices will push inflation higher and dampen economic activity.

Economists warn of further slowdown

Fergus Jimenez-England, associate economist at the National Institute of Economic and Social Research, warned that economic pressures could intensify in the coming months.

“We expect this slowdown to intensify as higher energy costs feed through the economy, with the impact likely to be felt most acutely in the third quarter as the energy price cap rises,” he said, as cited by The Guardian.

Market reaction

Market participants are now awaiting upcoming inflation and labour market data, which are expected to provide a clearer indication of how the conflict has affected the UK economy.

Meanwhile, the British pound attracted modest buying interest following the GDP release.

Sterling recovered most of its earlier losses against the US dollar, with GBP/USD rebounding towards 1.3410 despite a weaker-than-expected economic backdrop.