The Scotsman

Manufactur­ers’ momentum slackens

● Figures likely to fuel expectatio­ns of interest rate hike as early as November

- By PERRY GOURLEY

Britain’s manufactur­ers recorded their 14th straight month of rising production in September, but it was down on four-year highs seen in August as rising costs continued to take their toll.

The closely-watched Markit/ CIPS UK manufactur­ing purchasing managers’ index (PMI) showed a reading of 55.9 last month, down from 56.7 in August and coming in below economist expectatio­ns of 56.2. Any figure above 50 denotes growth.

Companies reported “solid” demand from both domestic and overseas markets, but IHS Markit director Rob Dobson said rising cost pressures are likely to impact company profit and could disrupt production in the short term.

He said that the sector was being buffeted by rising cost inflation due to higher commodity prices and higher import costs from the historical­ly weak sterling exchange rate since last year’s Brexit vote.

“Those factors are being exacerbate­d by supply-chain capacity constraint­s and input shortages. This will likely exert further upward pressure on prices, dent profitabil­ity and potentiall­y disrupt production schedules in coming months,” Dobson said.

“Although it looks as if the sector made solid progress through the third quarter as a whole, the growth slowdown in September is a further sign that momentum is being lost across the broader UK economy.”

The weak pound was cited by some firms for helping to boost exports, though its impact is now being felt less than it was earlier this year. Howard Archer, chief economic advisor for the EY Item Club, agreed that the latest survey pointed to a loss of impetus in the sector – which accounts for 12 per cent of GDP – after what was seen as a healthy summer for manufactur­ers.

“The outlook for manufactur­ing appears somewhat mixed as a promising export environmen­t is countered by challengin­g-looking domestic conditions,” he said.

He added that the increasing price pressures were likely to fuel expectatio­ns that the Bank of England could raise interest rates next month.

The latest survey found optimism is still relatively strong among manufactur­ing firms, with more than 51 per cent expecting production to rise over the coming year, reflecting internatio­nal expansion efforts, efficiency drives and fresh investment plans.

Although job creation slowed from August’s threeyear high, it was described as “broad-based”, spanning the consumer, intermedia­te and investment goods industries.

Andy Hall, head of corporate banking for Barclays in central Scotland, said the figures showed that “manufactur­ing continues to register encouragin­g levels of growth.

“However, the benefits of a weak sterling and an improving global economy, as well as the continuing support from domestic demand, won’t necessaril­y have the desired effect unless the sector invests more to improve efficiency and beef up capacity,” he said.

“With Brexit negotiatio­ns now a reality, uncertaint­y around what any deal will look like will continue to hinder investment intentions but manufactur­ers have proved time after time that they are good at getting on with business.”

“Outlook appears somewhat mixed as promising export environmen­t is countered by challengin­g-looking domestic conditions” HOWARD ARCHER

 ?? Picture: Andrew Milligan/pa Wire ?? 0 Factories enjoying solid demand from domestic and overseas markets
Picture: Andrew Milligan/pa Wire 0 Factories enjoying solid demand from domestic and overseas markets

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