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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Business activity in Wales rises for the first time since before lockdown

However new orders across the Welsh private sector continued to contract

The latest NatWest Regional PMI report showed more regions reporting growth (Image: Andrew Matthews/PA Wire)

Business activity in Wales has risen for the first time since February.

The NatWest Wales Business Activity Index, a seasonally-adjusted index that measures the month-on-month change in the combined output of Wales’ manufacturing and service sectors, registered 50.2 at the start of the third quarter, up from 48.4 in June.

The latest figure from NatWest, a partner of BusinessLive, signalled only a fractional rise in business activity, but nonetheless the first expansion since February.

The slight increase in output was reportedly linked to the reopening of businesses and clients, despite customer orders continuing to fall. That said, the rate of growth was much slower than the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ average.

New orders across the Welsh private sector continued to contract in July, albeit at the slowest pace in the current five-month sequence of decline.

The decrease in new business contrasted with the trend seen across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ as a whole, where a solid rise was registered.

Wales was only one of two monitored areas to record a fall in client demand, the other being Scotland.

Although some firms stated that the partial reopening of businesses helped boost sales, the impact of the pandemic meant customer demand remained weak.