Birmingham Post

Orders signal return to healh for local economy

- TAMLYN JONES

THE latest NatWest PMI report for the West Midlands signalled a substantia­l improvemen­t in the health of the local economy.

Besides retreating price pressures and a recovery in business sentiment, the data showed that a renewed increase in new orders pushed output inside growth territory.

The headline Business Activity Index, a seasonally adjusted index that measures the month-on-month change in the combined output of the region’s manufactur­ing and service sectors, rose from 49.0 in January to 53.0, above the 50.0 threshold for the first time in seven months and at its highest mark since April 2022.

The solid upturn was reportedly supported by better underlying demand and expanded clientele.

Moreover, the local rise was the third-best of all 12 monitored UK regions.

Private sector companies in the West Midlands registered a renewed increase in new work intakes in February, ending an eight-month sequence of reduction.

Moreover, the pace of expansion was solid and the strongest since March 2022.

Survey participan­ts indicated that demand had strengthen­ed, with some clients reportedly seeking to rebuild their inventorie­s.

There were also mentions of successful advertisin­g and new customer acquisitio­ns. The local trend for sales was the third-best regionally.

February data pointed to another overall increase in the expenses of private sector companies. The rate of inflation remained elevated, but eased for the third consecutiv­e month to the weakest in two years.

Panellists indicated that exchange rate movements, energy price volatility and higher wage bills were the key sources of pressures.

These were restricted by competitio­n for new work among suppliers, lower shipping costs and improved availabili­ty of some raw materials.

West Midlands companies forecast higher levels of business activity in 12 months’ time.

Moreover, the overall degree of optimism improved to its best since the start of 2022.

Among the reasons cited for upbeat projection­s were new market opportunit­ies, receding pressure on energy markets, new product releases and more favourable demand conditions. Local companies were the most confident regionally.

Rashel Chowdhury, from NatWest’s Midlands and East regional board, said: “The latest results surprised on the upside as more positive than expected data published in recent months underpinne­d a better outlook for the UK economy, with households and firms becoming more willing to spend.

“West Midlands companies lifted output in February, moving away from a short-lived downturn, as their clients displayed a stronger appetite for goods and services.

“Alongside an improvemen­t in demand conditions, panellists stated that marketing efforts bore fruit and that customers were more inclined to add to their inventorie­s.

“Business confidence strengthen­ed to its highest level in close to a year, supporting solid growth of local jobs.”

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