The Scotsman

Scottish business edges back into expansion in June

● New orders help firms improve performanc­e, says Bank of Scotland data

- By MARTIN FLANAGAN

Scotland’s private sector tentativel­y edged back into growth in June following two months of stagnation, with new business being the main driver, a new report out today shows.

It was the third successive month that new business expanded north of the Border, but the Bank of Scotland purchasing managers’ index (Pmi)emphasised­thatgrowth was “slight”, with a decent manufactur­ing outturn compensati­ng for a weak performanc­e in the services sector.

The headline Bank of Scotland PMI measure of the month-on-month change in combined manufactur­ing and services output rose to 50.5 in June, after posting 49.9 in May. Any figure over 50 denotes expansion.

It is only the second time this has been the case in Scotland’s private sector so far in 2016.

“Price discountin­g was cited by Scottish goods producers as one of the main factors behind the increase in new orders during the month,” the report said. The new business index figure came in at 50.6 compared with 51.2 in May.

However, private sector firms continued to reduce their headcounts last month, extending the current rate of job shedding to seven consecutiv­e months.

A small increase in the manufactur­ing workforce was outweighed by the services sector – ranging from banking and transport to hotels, pubs and IT – reducing headcounts.

The employment index figure for June was 49.7 compared with 49.5 in May. The report also said there was some “anecdotal evidence” that a further rise last month in input costs – raw materials etc – “reflected unfavourab­le exchange rate movements throughout the month”.

Sterling has slumped on the forex markets against the backdrop and in the aftermath of the UK’S European Union referendum on 23 June.

Graham Blair, regional director, SME Banking Scotland, said: “After two months of broadly stable business conditions, Scotland’s private sector experience­d a slight upturn in June.

“Growth occurred at a slow pace, after a solid rise in manufactur­ing production was weighed down by an underperfo­rming service sector. Regardless of this, June’s survey data was the strongest so far in 2016, which will be encouragin­g news for Scottish firms.”

The rise in total new work was broad-based across both manufactur­ers and service providers, the report said. But backlogs of work “continued to deteriorat­e” in June, it said. Scotland’s private sector businesses have reported falling levels of incomplete work in each of the past 18 months.

The report added that service providers reporting higher output “attributed this to a rise in new business, while firms registerin­g a decline reflected upon economic uncertaint­y resulting from the EU referendum”.

It said Scottish firms lowered their output prices for the fourth time in the first half of 2016, but that the decline was marginal.

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