Resurgent PMI a ‘shot in the arm’ for UK manufacturing
PMI has surged back over the 50 benchmark for growth, providing UK manufacturing with a 'shot in the arm', according to economists.
The well regarded Markit/CIPS UK Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) rose to an eight month high of 52.1 in January.
Output expanded at the fastest pace since last March, new orders rose following a period of contraction and payroll numbers stabilised.
Companies reported an increased willingness to spend among some UK clients and a further increase in new export orders. Foreign demand also rose for the second month running in January, and manufacturers reported lower costs for commodities, metals, packaging, paper, plastics and timber.
Rob Dobson, senior economist at Markit and author of the PMI, said January saw manufacturing 'kick start back into life', before cautioning that growth was 'nowhere near the surging highs of 12 months ago'.
David Noble, ceo of the Chartered Institute of Purchasing & Supply, described the UK manufacturing sector as springing to life in the first month of 2012, but also warned that it was too early to say whether the trend was sustainable.
"In the long term, it's looking like businesses will need to refocus on emerging growth markets outside the weaker Eurozone to achieve sustainable growth even though spending was at a higher level in the UK compared to last month," he said.
"If emerging markets are the future, breakdowns in supply owing to port closures and the impact of flooding in Thailand underline the need to ensure international supply chains are sufficiently flexible, robust, with an understanding of risk mitigation to maintain business continuity."
Mark Lee, head of manufacturing at Barclays Corporate, said the figures were a shot in the arm for manufacturing, a sector that appeared to be increasingly looking outside of the Eurozone for export growth.
At EEF, the manufacturers' organisation, chief economist Lee Hopley was more cautious, warning that the data was not a return to strong growth. However, it was, she said a 'rebuttal to fears that manufacturing is sliding backwards'.