MANUFACTURING AT SLOWEST PACE FOR 20 MONTHS
The manufacturing activity grew at its slowest pace in 20 months in May, and weaker export and consumer demand led to the first drop in new orders in two years, fuelling fears about the pace of the recovery.
The CIPS manufacturing PMI headline index, published on Wednesday, fell to 52.1 last month from a downwardly revised 54.4 in April, well below the 54.1 consensus forecast. The worst headline reading since September 2009 was blamed on a weaker domestic market, particularly for consumer goods, and the slowest growth in export orders in eight months. Extra public holidays also reduced activity.
The surprisingly weak figures will reinforce worries about the resilience of Britain’s economy at a time of public spending cuts, high inflation and uncertain consumer demand. Sluggish growth in the first quarter fuelled speculation the Bank of England will delay raising interest rates until around the turn of the year from a record low of 0.5 percent to let the recovery gather pace. Manufacturing, which accounts for around 13 percent of UK output, had been one of the few success stories during a slow return to growth after a recession that ended late in 2009