PMI: UK manufacturing downturn eases in November

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November saw the UK manufacturing sector potentially turning a corner. Although production contracted for the ninth consecutive month, the rate of decline eased sharply to its second-weakest during that sequence, according to the latest seasonally adjusted S&P Global / CIPS UK Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI).

The downturn in new orders, although still solid, also slowed during the month. Manufacturers nonetheless remained on a cautious footing, with ongoing market uncertainty and the need to control costs leading to job losses, stock depletion and lower purchasing.

The PMI posted 47.2 in November, up from 44.8 in October, rising for the third successive month to its highest level since April. The PMI has still posted below the neutral 50.0 mark in each of the past 16 months.

November saw all five of the PMI components (new orders, output, employment, suppliers' delivery times and stocks of purchases) remain at levels consistent with a deterioration in operating conditions, albeit to lesser extents than in the prior survey month.

The downturn in production was led by manufacturers focussed towards business-to-business and capital spending. Intermediate goods output decreased at the sharpest pace in almost a year while investment goods production contracted for the seventh month in a row (but to the weakest extent during that sequence). Consumer goods output rebounded following four months of decline.

The main factors underlying the further scaling back of production were weaker domestic demand, decreased intakes of new export business and destocking at both manufacturers and their clients. Total new orders fell for the eighth successive month, while the downturn in new export business extended to 22 consecutive months.

Manufacturers linked weaker inflows of new business to a combination of client destocking, lost customers, market uncertainty, budget constraints and lower inflows of new work from both the public and private sectors.

New export business was affected by strong international competition hurting sales to several overseas markets including mainland China, Europe and the US.

Business confidence edged higher in November, reflecting expectations that new product launches, economic recovery and a stabilisation of market conditions would support future output growth. Around 53% of companies forecast that production would increase over the coming year, compared to 10% expecting contraction.

Manufacturers remained cautious regarding the current situation, leading to an increased focus on efficiency gains and cost minimisation. Subsequently the levels of employment, input purchasing and stocks were all scaled back during the latest survey month.

Job losses were registered for the fourteenth successive month. Data broken down by company size indicated that cuts at medium- and large-scale producers were only partly offset by modest jobs growth at small-sized manufacturers.

Input buying activity was reduced for the seventeenth month in a row, in part reflecting intentional destocking. Inventories of inputs and finished products were depleted during November. In both cases, the falls were linked to efforts to protect cash flow and softer market demand.

Input costs continued to fall during November. A wide range of goods were reported as down in price including chemicals, energy, food products, metals, packaging, paper, plastics, pulp and timber. Despite the sustained reduction in input costs, manufacturers increased their selling prices fractionally as part of efforts to repair margins.

Maddie Walker, Industry X lead for Accenture in the UK, said: “While we must remember that this is still the ninth consecutive month of contraction, the easing decline in production across the UK’s manufacturing sector is a much welcome improvement for the industry. Waning inflation has provided some relief and this is a moment for tentative optimism.

"Plans laid out by the Chancellor in the Autumn Statement, such as new regional advanced manufacturing investment zones, may also help to re-energise the industry.

"Nonetheless, while manufacturers may have passed the peak of economic difficulty, growth is still expected to be sluggish for the manufacturing industry in 2024. To maintain resilience, manufacturers will need to invest in digital technologies and automation – streamlining processes, fuelling their factories with AI, and optimising production in a persistently testing time.”