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Decline in West Midlands business activity slows - report

Some companies lowered output due to reduced new business while others signalled growth amid tentative signs of an improvement, says newly published research

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

West Midlands output decreased further at the start of 2023 but the downturn was mild and the slowest in three months, according to newly published research.

The latest NatWest PMI, a seasonally adjusted index that measures the month-on-month change in the combined output of the region's manufacturing and service sectors, was at 49.0 in January, little-changed from 48.9 in December and signalling the weakest rate of contraction since last October.

Some companies lowered output due to reduced new business while others signalled growth amid tentative signs of an improvement in demand and successful marketing efforts. The local fall in output was the second-weakest of the 11 regions that noted a decline.

There was only a fractional decline in new business placed with West Midlands companies in January, as signalled by the respective seasonally adjusted index posting close to the 50.0 neutral level.

Some companies noted a fall in new work intakes due to challenging economic conditions and subdued demand but others indicated that marketing efforts and new contract wins supported sales. The West Midlands saw the slowest contraction in new business of the eight regions that posted a reduction.

Average input costs at West Midlands companies continued to rise sharply in January but the rate of inflation eased to the weakest since March 2021. Beverages, food, labour, utility and raw materials were cited as key sources of cost pressures.

The latest increase was reportedly curbed by a moderation in prices for fuel, metals and plastics.