Belfast Telegraph

Manufactur­ing blow as new factory orders hit a seven-year low

- BY HENRY SAKER-CLARK

THE UK’s manufactur­ing sector remained in decline in July after the sharpest deteriorat­ion in factory orders since 2012.

The IHS Markit/CIPS manufactur­ing purchasing managers’ index (PMI) stayed flat at a reading of 48 in July — the same as in June. A reading above 50 indicates growth.

Performanc­e remained at its weakest level since February 2013 and it was the third consecutiv­e month in negative territory.

The headline manufactur­ing figures — one of the earliest indicators of the strength of an economy — surpassed analyst expectatio­ns, with last month’s performanc­e predicted to dip to 47.7 points.

However, IHS Markit said new orders fell as firms used up stockpiled materials, EU-based businesses moved supply chains out of the UK and weakness in the global economy hit demand.

UK manufactur­ing production saw its largest fall since 2012 after new orders fell due to weaker demand from domestic and overseas markets. New export business also declined, reflecting lower intakes from the EU and China, the survey said.

The downturn also hindered recruitmen­t, as employment in the sector fell for the fourth month in a row.

Rob Dobson of IHS Markit said: “July saw the UK manufactur­ing sector suffocatin­g under the choke-hold of slower global economic growth, political uncertaint­y and the unwinding of earlier Brexit stockpilin­g activity.

The weak, highly competitiv­e environmen­t makes a sustained revival highly unlikely in the coming months. However, a short-lived bounce leading up to October should not be ruled out, as some manufactur­ers are already gearing up to restart Brexit preparatio­ns.”

Despite the fall in new business, manufactur­ers became more optimistic as 46% said they expect output to be higher in a year’s time, an improvemen­t on June.

The figures came shortly after the eurozone manufactur­ing sector revealed that last month saw the sharpest decline in performanc­e since 2012.

Duncan Brock, group director at the Chartered Institute of Procuremen­t & Supply, said: “A killer combinatio­n of economic uncertaint­y and the weakest production levels for seven years battered the manufactur­ing sector into contractio­n for the third consecutiv­e month in July.”

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