Yorkshire Post

40-month low for activity levels from UK manufactur­ing

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PURCHASING MANAGERS have reported that UK services and manufactur­ing activity were at 40-month low in November, with the contractio­n set to continue.

Informatio­n published in the latest Item Club report from profession­al services firm EY showed that there had been an “inauspicio­us start” for the new flash purchasing managers.

It was reported that domestic activity was being hampered by a lack of clarity on Brexit as well as business uncertaint­y being magnified by the forthcomin­g General Election. It was also reported that there had been overstocki­ng ahead of the scheduled October 31 UK exit from the EU.

Overall new orders contracted for a fourth month running in November and at the fastest rate since July 2016, with domestic and foreign demand both soft. Backlogs of work were run down at the fastest rate for over seven years.

One extract read: “Our current expectatio­n is that GDP growth will be limited to just 0.2 per cent quarter-on-quarter in the fourth quarter and the risks to this outlook currently look slanted to the downside. Much could depend on whether consumers spend a decent amount for Christmas.

“There is very little – if anything – in the survey on which to pin hopes for a pick-up in activity in the near term at least . However, much could depend on whether the next couple of months see a significan­t waning of domestic political and Brexit uncertaint­ies.”

Overall employment fell in the manufactur­ing and services sectors for a third month running in November, albeit marginally Howard Archer, chief economic adviser to the EY ITEM Club, inset, said: “Specifical­ly, the composite output index for manufactur­ing and services weakened to 48.6 in November from 50.0 in October, there moving clearly below the 50.0 level that indicates flat activity.

“It was also the second month in the past three of contractio­n in services and manufactur­ing output. Boding ill for activity in the near term at least, joint orders were reported to have contracted in November for a fourth month running and at the fastest rate since July 2016.”

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