UK exports to US remain below pre-tariff levels despite improvement
UK exports to the US improved again last month but remained below pre-tariff levels as firms continue to recover from disruption to trade.
Figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) showed that exports to the US rose by ยฃ0.8 billion to ยฃ4.7 billion in July.
This marked the highest level since March, before President Trumpโs administration announced its major tariffs programme.
Exports remained significantly below the ยฃ6.1 billion peak of exports prior to the new tariff rules after firms shipped goods to the US in large numbers in preparation for the shake-up.
Meanwhile, imports to the UK from the US slipped by ยฃ0.5 billion to ยฃ4.6 billion, representing the lowest level since November last year.
Total good imports into the UK rose by ยฃ2.7 billion, or 5.4%, of the month, with stronger demand for products from both EU and non-EU countries.
The value of exports from the UK overseas increased by ยฃ1.9 billion, or 6.6%, for the month.
The figures also showed that the UKโs trade deficit for goods and services widened by ยฃ0.4 billion to ยฃ10.4 billion in the three months to July, as imports grew by more than exports.
Analysts said it was partly driven by a larger-than-expected deficit in July.
Elliott Jordan-Doak, senior UK economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said: โThe underlying trade balance fell erratically in July, but it will remain weak.
โThe headline trade deficit widened in July, driven by a sharp deterioration in the underlying trade balance.โ
The ONS reported that there was zero growth in gross domestic product (GDP) month on month in July, slowing from 0.4% growth in June.
Kathleen Brooks at XTB said the โweakโ monthly trade data โweighedโ on GDP during the month.
