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Our crystal ball

An important feature of our reports – we are launching three new reports this year - is the forecast section where we look into our crystal ball and project future market trends. In the past, this has proved relatively easy and it was just a matter of plugging key data into a computer model. But the current situation has us scratching our heads.

In the ‘real world’ economy of average earnings, inflation, unemployment and consumer confidence there is every indication that the UK economy will struggle in the short-term. Economic growth will be flat and there is a chance of the UK dipping back into recession in 2012.

The year on year increase in average earnings has been around 2% for the last three months, and apart from January and June 2011, it has barely exceeded 3%. On the other hand, inflation as measured by RPI has run at around 5% during 2011. Clearly this disparity makes people poorer.

Unemployment increased substantially during the recent recession and has stayed stubbornly high since the middle of 2009, reaching 8.3% in October 2011 - the highest since 1994.

Predictably consumer confidence is extremely low. The Nationwide Consumer Confidence Index stood at 36 points in October, which is the lowest since its inception in April 2004. As we have pointed out here before, new car sales correlate strongly with consumer confidence.

These and other economic trends, suggest that 2012/2013 will be a re-run of 2011. After that, the return of economic growth depends on the success of government policies and what happens in the global economy and Euroland in particular.

It seems to us that the coalition government is on the right track with its aim of reducing government spending as a proportion of the economy. But, so far the coalition has failed to get a grip and will probably have ended up taxing, borrowing and spending more in 2011 than recent years.

The big unknown is what will happen to the euro. EU politicians seem utterly determined to keep the euro alive even if it means reducing southern Europe to permanent penury rather than fixing the basic flaws in the design of the currency.

This could end in the disorderly failure of the euro and even the collapse of the European Union. It is more likely, however, that ailing countries like Greece will be forced out of the euro. Whatever happens, the UK will undoubtedly suffer.

For UK auto retailing, uncertain economic conditions make planning difficult. Past experience suggests that used cars and aftersales represent the most reliable profit centres in times of uncertainty, and there is every reason to hope these departments will not disappoint in 2012.

Written by Trend Tracker director Chris Oakham, this piece first appeared his column in the subscription monthly Auto Retail Bulletin.(See auto-retail.co.uk for subscription details.)



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