The
latest survey by the Confederation of British Industry (CBI) revealed on Thursday
the UK manufacturers' order books improved strongly in May.
According
to the report, the CBI's monthly factory order book balance increased to +17 in
May from -8 in the previous month. This was the highest reading since December 2017
and marked the first time order books have been considered to be “above normal”
since February 2019. Economists had forecast the reading to come in at 0. Meanwhile,
export order books (-17) were broadly unchanged from April (-18), but this
nonetheless represented the strongest outturn since February 2020 and was
around the long-run average.
The
CBI also reported that output volumes in the three months to May grew at the
fastest pace since December 2018 (+18, up from +3 in April). It was also expected that output
(+33) would accelerate further in the next three months.
In
other survey results, present stocks of finished goods (-6 from +5 in April) declined
to their weakest position since July 2017. This was also the first time since
July 2017 that stocks were considered “less than adequate”. Meanwhile, price
growth was seen to pick up rapidly in the next three months (+38 from +27 in
April), with expectations at their strongest since January 2018.
“Manufacturing
activity rebounded this month, with strong improvements seen across total order
books and output volumes,” noted Anna Leach, CBI Deputy Chief Economist. “But
firms are still feeling the chill as supply shortages fuel cost pressures,
reflected in expectations for strong output price inflation in the coming
quarter.”
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