UK PMI manufacturing dropped to 52.8 in August, down from 53.8 and missed expectation of 53.9. That’s also the lowest level in 25 months. Markit noted that job creation slowed to “near-stagnation” and business optimism dipped to 22-month low.
Rob Dobson, Director at IHS Markit, which compiles the survey:
“The performance of the UK manufacturing sector looked increasingly lacklustre in August. The headline PMI fell to its lowest level for over two years, as growth of output and new orders slowed and the pace of job creation slumped to near-stagnation. Based on its historical relationship with official ONS data, the latest PMI report is broadly consistent with zero growth in manufacturing production, meaning the sector will likely fail to provide any support to the wider UK economy in the third quarter.
“Although slower growth of domestic demand contributed to manufacturing’s weak performance, the main constraint was the trend in new export business. Foreign demand declined for the first time since April 2016, despite the weakness of sterling, amid reports of slower global economic growth and the increasingly uncertain trading environment. Inflows of new work from both domestic and overseas sources will need to strengthen if manufacturing is to show renewed vigour in the coming months.
“Looking ahead, manufacturers’ optimism about the outlook for the year ahead has been receding in recent months and is now at a 22-month low. While a hoped-for improvement in new export order growth and new product launches are forecast to stimulate future expansion, manufacturers are also expressing rising concerns about the uncertain backdrop of Brexit.”