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Buoyant demand fosters further growth of new business and output - report

West Midlands companies benefited from positive demand trends in May and responded to this by creating more jobs and lifting business activity

Rashel Chowdhury, from NatWest's Midlands and east regional board

West Midlands companies benefited from positive demand trends in May and responded to this by creating more jobs and lifting business activity, according to newly published research.

Inflation data also displayed an encouraging picture as the weakest increase in input costs for two-and-a-half years restricted the rate at which output charges were raised.

The NatWest PMI report, a seasonally adjusted index that measures the month-on-month change in the combined output of the region's manufacturing and service sectors, was up from 52.8 in April to 54.2, signalling the strongest expansion since April 2022.

Survey participants linked the upturn to better sales, capacity growth, favourable weather and fruitful publicity. Moreover, local output increased at the third-best rate seen out of the 12 monitored º£½ÇÊÓÆµ regions and nations.

May's data highlighted a fourth successive rise in new business placed with private sector companies in the West Midlands. Moreover, the rate of expansion was little-changed from April's marked pace.

Monitored firms linked the latest upturn to positive demand trends, new client wins and better weather conditions. Regionally, the West Midlands came third in the rankings for sales while only London and the South East saw stronger increases.

Although the latest results showed another substantial increase in input costs facing private sector companies in the West Midlands, the rate of inflation eased to the weakest since November 2020.