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West Midlands economy ends 2023 with regained growth momentum - report

With sales prospects coming to fruition and demand conditions remaining resilient, new orders rose at the quickest pace in six months, NatWest said

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

There was strengthening growth but rising price pressures across West Midlands businesses in December, according to new research.

With sales prospects coming to fruition and demand conditions remaining resilient, new orders rose at the quickest pace in six months, NatWest said in its latest PMI report.

Subsequently, there was a faster uptick in output and an improvement in business confidence. On the price front, input costs and output charges increased at stronger rates.

The 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, rose from 50.6 in November to a six-month high of 51.5 in December.

NatWest said this indicated a quicker rate of expansion that was the third-best of the 12 monitored º£½ÇÊÓÆµ regions and nations. New contract wins and better demand conditions spurred growth, anecdotal evidence showed.

New business intakes at private sector companies in the West Midlands continued to increase in December, therefore stretching the current sequence of expansion to 11 months.

Although modest, the rate of growth picked up to the quickest since June. Firms that reported gains cited greater customer numbers, demand resilience and the materialisation of sales prospects.