The Scotsman

Scottish businesses see growth grind to a halt in February

● Jobs cut for first time in four months ● But confidence levels holding up well

- @RBS By PERRY GOURLEY businessde­sk@scotsman.com

Scotland’s private sector economy headed towards stagnation last month with firms also cutting job numbers for the first time since October, according to a new report published today.

According to the latest Royal Bank of Scotland PMI report, the economy only grew by a fraction as a small decline in services activity almost offset renewed growth in manufactur­ing production.

Although overall new business reported by firms increased for the second month running, the pace of growth slowed from the previous month.

The bank’s seasonally adjusted business activity index – a measure of combined manufactur­ing and service sector output – posted 50.1 in February, down from 52 in January.

The latest data also highlighte­d a further rise in cost burdens facing Scottish private sector firms, as has been the case in each month for four years. Greater raw material and wage costs were the main drivers of inflation during February, according to panellists.

Malcolm Buchanan, chair of the bank’s Scotland board, said weak foreign demand and further uncertaint­y appeared to be weighing on growth.

“On a positive note, business confidence climbed to a 20-month high, with anecdotal evidence linking optimism to hopes of improved client demand,” he said.

“Nonetheles­s, sentiment in Scotland was the second-lowest across the 12 monitored UK areas, with only Northern Ireland reporting a softer outlook.”

The latest BDO Business Trends report, which was also published today, also showed optimism across businesses in the UK jumped by the largest margin in a decade in February.

However, the report’s authors said the prospect of the continued spread of coronaviru­s could threaten to reverse much of the gains.

Kaley Crossthwai­te, partner at BDO, said: “We have just witnessed the most significan­t uplift in business optimism in ten years, and the impact of greater political and economic certainty brought by a new majority government should not be underestim­ated.

“However, businesses will now be spending the coming weeks focussed on mitigating the uncertaint­y caused by coronaviru­s.”

The overall jump in business confidence in the UK was driven by BDO’S services optimism index, which increased by 6.52 points to 102.38, while the manufactur­ing optimism index rose marginally in February by 0.13 points to 95.82.

It said the comparativ­ely smaller rise in manufactur­ing optimism reflects the fundamenta­l problems facing the sector, including the higher cost of trade that will be imposed by leaving the EU.

Elsewhere in BDO’S Business Trends report there were clear signs of the impact of coronaviru­s. BDO’S inflation lndex fell by 0.48 points to 95.59, largely driven by dwindling commodity prices caused by factories in China temporaril­y shutting down.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom