Thursday 21 August 2025 10:18
British exporters to the US believe that their sales will grow more than companies that sell goods and services to other markets, a new survey has found, increasing the hope that trade will recover after the initial shocks.
Research by Yougov has suggested that 45 percent of companies selling products to the US are hopeful sales throughout the pool will grow in the next three months, compared to 20 percent for exporters to Germany and 17 percent for exporters to Canada and Australia.
The survey found that 27 percent of exporters planned to increase sales to existing markets.
One in four companies that export goods and services to the US said they had increased sales compared to the last in the country. That and telecommunications grow substantially, it is recommended for voting.
The majority of British companies said that the level of trade had developed over the past three months while one in three companies entered Pasar Baru, proving business resilience to the threat of tariffs and trade disruption.
The number of companies that claim sales to China grew slightly compared to the first quarter of this year while EU countries were more popular for exports between April and June.
London is behind trade success
The owner of London Stanted, Manchester Airports Group, assigns a survey together with alliances that grow together, with findings that show that the government must help “more companies become global”.
Head of Mag Executive Ken O’Toole said “Heart Optimism” around 0.3 percent growth in the second quarter and a broader government commitment to increase the level of productivity will be shown in trends highlighted in their trade surveys considering exporters are “more innovative, competitive, and productive”.
“What this data says to us is that British exporters navigate global trade turbulence well,” he said.
Yougov’s survey found that London companies perform far better than companies from other regions, with 63 percent of exporters to increase sales to existing markets.
About one in ten companies in the capital has also begun trading in China, with Italy and Canada the destination for expansion in the next three months.
John Dickie, Head of the Business Executive, asked the government to increase flights and train capacity to “increase international links” and support business in London.
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