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UK firms’ worries about economy rise by most since 2020, Lloyds survey shows

By Thomson Reuters Apr 29, 2026 | 6:16 PM

LONDON, April 30 (Reuters) – British businesses’ confidence about the economic outlook fell this month by the most since April ​2020 although their assessment of their ‌own prospects was less downbeat, a survey by Lloyds showed on Thursday.

The net balance in confidence about the wider economy in monthly Lloyds Business Barometer ‌sank ​by 17 points to +33 while ⁠businesses’ confidence in ⁠their own trading outlook fell by 6 points to +54.

“Businesses told us their confidence fell as inflation pressures re-emerged, global uncertainty persisted ​and costs remained elevated,” said Amanda Murphy, chief executive officer for Lloyds Business and ⁠Commercial Banking.

Lloyds’ headline business ⁠confidence balance fell to +44 in ​April from +55 in March and remains above its ​long-run average of +30. March’s reading was the ‌highest since November 2015, despite the start of U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran on February 28, which led to the ⁠closure of the Strait of Hormuz, causing oil prices to soar.

The survey has generally painted a more ⁠upbeat picture ‌of business sentiment than comparable ⁠surveys from the Confederation of British ​Industry ‌or S&P Global.

The Lloyds survey ​was based ⁠on responses from 1,200 firms with annual sales of at least 250,000 pounds ($337,200), collected by polling company Ipsos from April 1 to April 16.

($1 = 0.7414 pounds)

(Reporting by David MillikenEditing by ​William Schomberg)