Snow puts freeze on spending in weakest month for five years

Snowed-in British shoppers left the plastic alone in March after the weakest month for consumer spending in more than five years, worrying figures showed on Tuesday.
In a period blighted by blizzards across much of the country the Bank of England’s latest data showed just £254 million spent on credit cards and personal loans over the month, the lowest since November 2012.
The Bank’s lending data showed overall growth in consumer credit rising at just a fifth of the £1.5 billion average of the past six months. The £129 million spent on cards alone was the weakest since April last year, driving the 1.2% slump in retail sales over the month already revealed by the Office for National Statistics.
ING Bank’s James Smith warned: “With real incomes barely rising, such a sharp fall in consumer credit does not bode well for either the high street or the overall growth outlook.” The figures also offered more evidence of a cooling housing market as mortgage approvals fell more than 1% to 62,914.
The pound dropped nearly a cent below $1.37 as the Chartered Institute of Procurement & Supply’s latest snapshot showed fresh clouds over manufacturing. Its activity index, where a score over 50 signals growth, fell to 53.9 in April, the weakest for 17 months.
IHS Markit economist Rob Dobson said: “While adverse weather was partly to blame in February and March, there are no excuses for April’s disappointing performance, making the chances of a near-term hike in interest rates increasingly remote.”
Official estimates showed the economy growing 0.1% in the first quarter, the weakest performance since 2012.
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