December manufacturing activity at 25-month high
A survey has revealed that a sharp rise in new orders has led to a rise in manufacturing activity in December.
According to the closely-watched CIPS/Markit purchasing managers’ index (PMI), factory activity grew at its fastest pace in more than two years with the index rising to 54.1 in December, up from 51.8 the previous month and beating forecasts of a reading of 52.
The figures followed positive data from the Bank of England, which revealed a rise in the number of mortgages approved for house purchase in November.
Both sets of figures are likely to boost hopes that the UK will have emerged from recession in the fourth quarter of 2009.
Britain has been lagging behind other economies and is now the last major economy that is still in recession.
Meanwhile, commenting on today’s data, Rob Dobson, senior economist at Markit, said: “December PMI data signal a positive end to a tumultuous year for UK manufacturers.”
“The outlook is somewhat clouded given the uncertainty of the timing of fiscal and monetary stimuli withdrawal but the momentum and broad-base of the recovery should hopefully aid sustainability,” added Dobson.
In the meantime, the new orders index rose 4 points to 57.4 – the highest reading since July 2007. Firms attributed the gain to improving market conditions and retailers rebuilding stocks.
The figures also revealed that the rate of job cuts in the sector was the weakest since May 2008 and was mainly centred on larger companies.
Small and medium-sized businesses reported a slight increase in staffing levels.
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