UK businesses keep up recovery but prices still a worry, PMI shows Reuters via biedexmarkets.com

© Reuters. Joggers run over Waterloo Bridge, with skyscrapers of the City of London business district seen behind, at sunrise, as cold weather continues, in London, Britain, January 19, 2024. REUTERS/Toby Melville/File Photo

LONDON (Reuters) -British businesses kept up their recovery from recession this month but stubborn price pressures could bolster the Bank of England’s wait-and-see approach to interest rates, a survey showed Thursday.

Closely watched by the BoE ahead of its 1200 GMT interest rate decision, the S&P Global Composite Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) inched down to 52.9 in March from 53.0 in February.

A Reuters poll of economists had pointed to a reading of 53.1. Despite the slight fall, the index notched up a fifth month above the 50 threshold for growth and signalled Britain is on track to exit the shallow recession it entered in the second half of last year.

Survey compiler S&P Global said economic output was likely to expand around 0.25% in the first quarter, based on the PMI’s previous track record, similar to the consensus of 0.2% among economists polled Reuters via biedexmarkets.com.

The readings contrasted with those of France and Germany, where the PMI signalled a continued downturn in their private sector economies.

“The fact that the economy’s contraction last year looks increasingly likely to have been short-lived is one reason why the (BoE) probably won’t be in a rush to cut interest rates just yet,” said Martin Beck, chief economist adviser to the EY ITEM Club consultancy.

“Another is concern that underlying inflationary pressures haven’t yet eased sufficiently. March’s survey is unlikely to calm that worry,” Beck said.

The composite PMI – which BoE officials had access to ahead of their rate decision – showed no sign of a further rapid easing of inflation pressure.

While its gauge of input prices eased back slightly from February’s six-month high, for selling prices it rose to the highest level since July 2023.

“March’s PMI warns of elevated underlying price pressures which will likely add to calls for restraint in any pivot to lower interest rates until there are firm signs of lower wage growth,” S&P Global’s chief business economist Chris Williamson said.

Official data on Wednesday showed consumer price inflation fell to 3.4% in February from 4.0% in January, the lowest reading since September 2021. While slowing, services inflation remains stubbornly high.

The PMI for the services sector fell to 53.4 in March from 53.8 in February, a three-month low and against expectations for an unchanged reading. Its measures of employment and new orders cooled, the latter reaching the lowest since November.

The manufacturing sector came within a whisker of ending its 20-month downturn in March. The factory PMI rose to 49.9 – just below the 50 no-change mark – from 47.5, while output turned positive for the first time in more than a year.

However, the survey’s gauges of industrial input costs hit a 1-year high, while selling prices rose at the fastest rate since May.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
WhatsApp
Email