Khaleej Times

UAE’s private sector growth hits 30-month high on new orders

- Staff Report

dubai — Growth in the UAE non-oil private sector economy climbed to the fastest pace seen since February 2015, bolstered by sharp expansions in new orders and output.

“The August PMI survey shows a strong expansion in the non-oil private sector, underpinne­d by sharply higher output, new orders and inventorie­s. Firms have indicated that new projects and competitiv­e pricing are supporting demand and activity in the non-oil sector. This is in line with our view that investment ahead of Expo 2020 will be the key driver of the UAE’s non-oil growth over the next few years,” said Khatija Haque, head of Mena research at Emirates NBD.

The headline seasonally-adjusted Emirates NBD UAE Purchasing Managers’ Index climbed to a 30-month high of 57.3 in August from 56.0 in July. Moreover, the overall upturn in the non-oil private sector outperform­ed the long-run average. The improvemen­t in business conditions was driven by an increase in new orders. Firms frequently linked new client wins to new projects, enhanced marketing initiative­s and good quality products. A sharp rise in business activity also contribute­d to the overall improvemen­t in the UAE’s non-oil private sector. Where an increase was registered, firms commented on favourable economic conditions.

New export orders rose for the first time in three months. The rate of growth was marginal, however. Surveyed companies cited other GCC countries as key sources of internatio­nal demand. The ongoing upturn in new business continued to translate into job creation during August. The rate of expansion was only marginal, however.

Companies engaged in purchasing activity during August, in response to greater output requiremen­ts. Consequent­ly, inventorie­s held by firms rose at the most pronounced rate in the survey’s history. This reflected firms’ forecasts of further improvemen­ts in market demand, according to panelists.

The PMI data showed that firms continued to face intense input cost pressures, which mainly emanated from higher purchasing costs according to underlying data. In contrast, output charges stabilised during August as firms were reportedly unable to pass on higher cost burdens amid intensive competitio­n. This ended a four-month sequence of falling output prices, however.

In addition, business sentiment remained positive despite dipping to the lowest in three months.

— waheedabba­s@khaleejtim­es.com

 ?? AP ?? New export orders rose for the first time in three months. —
AP New export orders rose for the first time in three months. —

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