(Sharecast News) - London stocks were flat in early trade on Thursday after data showed that the UK economy stagnated in February as strikes dented productivity.
At 0825 BST, the FTSE 100 was steady at 7,828.07.

According to the Office for National Statistics, there was zero growth, down from 0.4% growth in January and versus expectations of a 0.1% increase. January's growth was revised up from 0.3%.

Falls in services and production were offset by growth in construction.

The services sector fell by 0.1% following 0.7% growth the month before. The ONS said the biggest contributor to the negative growth in services was education, which fell 1.7% due to teacher strikes. This followed growth of 2.5% in January.

Public administration - which was also hit by strikes - was the second largest contributor, falling by 1.1% in February.

Production output fell 0.2% in February following a 0.5% drop the month before, but construction output rose 2.4% following a 1.7% decline in January.

Samuel Tombs, chief UK economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said: "Looking ahead, we continue to expect GDP to be broadly flat again in Q2. Admittedly, households' real disposable incomes likely will rise by almost 1% quarter-on-quarter in Q2, primarily due to a sharp increase in the value of benefits in April. But some households will prioritise rebuilding the savings buffer that they have run down over the last year, while others will step up debt repayments in response to the rise in interest rates, ensuring that real expenditure rises only marginally.

"Meanwhile, business investment and residential investment look set to fall sharply in Q2, in response to the jump in interest rates and government policies, such as the end of the super-deduction for capital investment and the phasing out of the Help to Buy Scheme in Q1. GDP also will be depressed again in Q2 by ongoing strikes in the health and education sectors. Accordingly, we are sticking to our forecast for a 0.1% quarter-on-quarter decline in GDP in Q2."

Investors were also digesting the latest data out of China, which showed that exports unexpectedly spiked in March versus forecasts of a contraction, as the economy continued to recover from its zero-Covid policies and months of falling trade due to lockdowns.

Dollar-denominated exports grew 14.8% year-on-year, after falling 6.8% in January and February and against forecasts of a 7% contraction. Imports fell 1.4%, compared with expectations of a 5% decline.

In equity markets, housebuilders were the best performers after HSBC upgraded its stance on Barratt, Bellway, Berkeley, Crest Nicholson, Persimmon, Redrow and Taylor Wimpey.

Supermarket chain Tesco gained after saying it expects to post flat profits this year and announcing a £750m share buyback as annual earnings fell last year after it absorbed the cost on inflation instead of passing it on to customers. The company said group pre-tax profit halved to £1bn. Retail adjusted operating profit fell 6.3% to £2.49bn.

Tobacco company Imperial Brands lost ground despite saying it was on track to deliver earnings in line with expectations and low single-digit constant currency net revenue growth.

Imperial Leather maker PZ Cussons advanced after it backed its full-year expectations and posted a rise in third-quarter revenues as price increases underpinned margins.

Darktrace shares rose as the cyber security firm downgraded its full-year annual recurring revenue (ARR) guidance to the lower end of its previous range, but increased its adjusted EBITDA margin expectations.

Oxford Instruments rallied as it said trading for the full year was ahead of expectations.

Lloyds, Unite, TP Icap, ITV and Harbour Energy were all in the red as they traded without entitlement to the dividend.