UK April final manufacturing PMI 45.4 vs 44.0 prelim
- Manufacturing PMI 45.4 vs 44.0 prelim
- Prior 44.9
Key details:
- New orders and employment all decrease.
- Input cost inflation at 28-month high.
Comment:
Rob Dobson, Director at S&P Global Market Intelligence
“The start of the second quarter saw UK manufacturing buffeted by adverse global market conditions, rising cost pressures, deteriorating supply chains and increased trade uncertainty. April saw further contractions in output, new orders and exports, as well as a slump in business confidence to its lowest ebb since November 2022.
“Although domestic demand remains soft, overseas demand is especially weak. New export business fell at the quickest pace for nearly five years, with demand from clients in the US, Europe and mainland China all declining. Surveyed manufacturers noted that US tariff announcements were having a noticeable impact on global markets as trading partners adapt to increased trade volatility.
“Manufacturers are also seeing an increasingly harsh cost environment, with purchase price inflation hitting a 28-month high. Alongside general raw material price increases on global markets, UK producers are also facing domestic inflationary pressure from increases to National Insurance, minimum wages and the knock-on impact of the latter on higher pay grades. These increased costs are resulting in a combination of higher selling prices and cutbacks to non-essential spending on staffing and purchasing, potentially reinforcing the 'rising costs, declining demand' backdrop."