The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Manufactur­ing sector showing recovery signs

- BY AUGUST GRAHAM

The manufactur­ing sector in the United Kingdom returned to growth in March for the first time in 20 months as companies took in new orders and output increased.

Figures from the S&P Global/CIPS UK manufactur­ing PMI survey hit 50.3 in March, rising from 47.5 in the February statistics. The score was slightly better than the 49.9 economists had forecast according to a consensus supplied by Pantheon Macroecono­mics.

Any score above 50 is considered to show the sector is growing, and this is the first time since July 2022 the PMI rose above that level.

“The end of the first quarter saw UK manufactur­ing recover from its recent doldrums,” said Rob Dobson, director at S&P Global Market Intelligen­ce.

“Production and new orders returned to growth, albeit only hesitantly, following year-long downturns, with the main thrust of the expansion coming from stronger domestic demand.”

The survey found there was still a “weak” trend in new export orders.

Demand from overseas might have fallen at the slowest rate since last April, but it is still the 26th month it has contracted.

Production increased for the first time since February 2023, the survey said, helped by the consumer goods sector which offset downturns elsewhere.

Customers were starting

to restock their shelves, the survey said.

“The upturn in demand also led to improved confidence among manufactur­ers, with positive sentiment hitting an 11-month high,” Mr Dobson said.

“Some 58% of companies expect their output to increase over the coming

year. We are also seeing signs of stabilisat­ions in employment and purchasing activity alongside a move towards lowering safety stocks, all signs that manufactur­ers are tentativel­y optimistic about the road ahead.

“Potential blockers remain such as continued weak export performanc­e

and supply chain stresses, with the neighbouri­ng EU market the main drag on overseas demand and the Red Sea crisis still impacting supply chains.

“Signs from the survey that the impact of both of these factors is easing is therefore welcome news.”

 ?? ?? IMPROVEMEN­T: Manufactur­ers have reported better than expected figures.
IMPROVEMEN­T: Manufactur­ers have reported better than expected figures.

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