Budget
UK Business Confidence Hits a 4-Year Low — The Insolvency Wave Nobody’s Pricing In
Britain’s headline economic data has looked defensible in 2026: the economy grew 0.6% in the first quarter, unemployment has stayed contained, and inflation, while above target, hasn’t spiralled. Yet underneath that data, business sentiment has collapsed to levels not seen since the post-mini-budget turmoil of 2022. The ICAEW Business Confidence Monitor recorded minus 14.6 for the second quarter — six consecutive quarters in negative territory, while the Institute of Directors’ sentiment index cratered to minus 61 in June, down from minus 53 in May, with the revenue-expectations sub-index collapsing to 11 from 27, its lowest reading of the year.
Most coverage has treated this as a generic “confidence is soft” story tied loosely to the Middle East conflict. The more precise and underreported explanation is a specific transmission mechanism: an energy-cost shock colliding with a Bank of England that cannot cut rates, arriving at the exact moment the UK is also absorbing a leadership transition.
The Mechanism: Energy Costs Meet a Frozen Bank Rate
The Bank of England has held its base rate at 3.75% through the summer, and Governor Andrew Bailey has been explicit that rate cuts once priced in for 2026 are now “off the table.” His reasoning: the US-Iran conflict pushed energy prices higher for months, and even as oil has since retreated, the inflationary pressure from that period is still working through the pipeline. Chief Economist Huw Pill went further, warning rates might need to rise again if inflation — currently at 2.8%, above the 2% target — proves persistent, noting the economy may still be running beyond its productive capacity.
For businesses, this is the worst combination: input costs that rose sharply during the conflict period, a central bank unwilling to ease borrowing costs to compensate, and — according to the IoD survey — 72% of businesses reporting rising energy and fuel costs, with a fifth facing increases of at least 25%. Falling confidence in this context isn’t sentiment noise; it’s a rational response to a genuine margin squeeze with no near-term monetary relief in sight.
The PMI Confirms It’s Not Just Survey Noise
S&P Global’s composite Purchasing Managers’ Index — a harder, transaction-based confidence signal — fell to 49.4 in June, its lowest level in 14 months, with services activity slumping to a 41-month low of 48.7. Anything below 50 signals contraction. The drop was driven specifically by weaker consumer discretionary spending and businesses delaying planned expenditure — the textbook pattern of firms battening down ahead of an anticipated downturn rather than merely feeling gloomy.
The Political Overlay Nobody’s Pricing Correctly
Compounding the energy-and-rates squeeze is a leadership transition most international coverage underweighted. Prime Minister Starmer’s decision to step down following poor local election results has cleared the way for Andy Burnham to become Prime Minister, securing nominations from more than 320 Labour MPs. Business Secretary Peter Kyle has separately floated the possibility of legislating to force UK pension funds to invest more domestically if voluntary commitments fall short — a policy signal that, regardless of its merits, adds a layer of regulatory uncertainty for institutional allocators at precisely the moment firms are already retrenching.
The Insolvency Risk This Points Toward
The Credit Protection Association’s own read on the data is the most operationally useful: falling confidence “often leads businesses to delay investment, tighten spending and become slower or more selective in paying suppliers” — a dynamic that shows up in payment-delay data before it shows up in headline insolvency statistics. With hospitality alone reporting nearly a quarter of venues operating at a loss and pub closures running at nearly two a day in early 2026, the sectors most exposed to discretionary consumer spending and energy costs are the ones most likely to show up in insolvency data over the coming two quarters — a lagging indicator that the confidence surveys are already flagging in real time.
What to Watch Next
Three signals will determine whether this is a temporary dip or the start of a genuine downturn: whether the Bank of England’s July Monetary Policy Report signals a rate rise rather than a hold; whether new Prime Minister Burnham’s tax proposals add or remove uncertainty for business investment; and whether the services PMI stabilises above 50 once the residual energy-price effects from the Middle East conflict fully clear the inflation pipeline.