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Business conditions in West Midlands 'worsened in September' - report

Latest NatWest PMI index says companies are trimming output due to reduced order and weak demand

John Maude, regional managing director for the Midlands and east with NatWest

Business conditions in the West Midlands worsened further in September with companies trimming output due to reduced new order intakes, weak underlying demand and acute price pressures, according to new research.

The latest NatWest PMI Business Activity Index, a seasonally adjusted index that measures the month-on-month change in the combined output of the region's manufacturing and service sectors, fell from 49.3 in August to 47.8 in September.

This signalled a second successive drop in output and one that was the fastest since January 2021. Moreover, the rate of contraction was sharper than the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ average.

September data highlighted a fourth consecutive fall in new work intakes at West Midlands companies and the rate of contraction was the fastest in 20 months.

According to panellists, the downturn stemmed from rising energy costs, acute price pressures and troubles in financial markets. After easing in each of the prior three months, the rate of input cost inflation accelerated during September.

The latest increase was steep relative to the series average but was among the weakest over the past year-and-a-half. NatWest said panellists blamed inflationary pressures on raw material scarcity, the war in Ukraine, sterling weakness and energy price volatility alongside higher costs of food, fuel and labour.

There was a substantial upturn in prices charged for goods and services in the West Midlands at the end of the third quarter. Although softening to the slowest since October 2021, the rate of inflation was much higher than its long-run average.