Global businesses growing in face of upcoming risks

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Reuters, London :
Business started 2017 on a solid footing, survey showed recently, thriving ahead of a myriad of political risks in the coming year.
Fears of a growing protectionist agenda in the United States, whether national elections across Europe upset the status quo and just how fractious Britain’s divorce proceedings from the European Union become, are all expected to weigh in the months ahead.
Yet so far those risks seem to have been mostly ignored with firms from Asia to Europe increasing or at least largely maintaining activity. Similar upbeat results are expected later from the United States.
Eurozone businesses started 2017 by increasing activity at the same multi-year record pace they set in December.
China’s factory activity grew for a seventh month and while India’s services business contracted for a third month as firms struggled to recover from a government crackdown on currency in circulation, the pace slowed.
‘The outlook for this year is reasonably bright despite all the risks. The numbers for January have generally been quite positive,’ said Andrew Kenningham, chief global economist at Capital Economics.
Growth in Britain’s services sector slowed for the first time in four months in January, dipping just below its long-run average, as businesses battled the sharpest rise in costs in more than five years.
But on Thursday the Bank of England sharply revised up its growth forecast for 2017 to 2.0 per cent, a view held by only the most optimistic forecaster in a Reuters poll of 50 economists taken last month.
Britain’s economy unexpectedly outpaced all its major peers last year, wrongfooting those who expected an immediate hit from June’s Brexit vote.
The Markit/CIPS British services Purchasing Managers’ Index dropped to a three-month low of 54.5 last month from December’s 15-month high, at the bottom end of a range of forecasts in a Reuters poll of economists, but Markit said the PMIs still point to first quarter growth of 0.5 per cent.
IHS Markit’s final composite PMI for the eurozone, seen as a good guide to growth, held at 54.4. It has not been higher since May 2011 and has remained above the 50 mark dividing growth from contraction since mid-2013.
That points to first quarter expansion of 0.4 per cent, Markit said, matching the median prediction in a Reuters poll.

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