Egypt Non-Oil Private Sector Activity Hit 3-Year Low
2026-05-05 04:30
By
Mariene Camarillo
1 min. read
The S&P Global Egypt PMI fell to 46.6 in April 2026 from 48.0 in March, marking a sharper deterioration in non-oil private sector conditions and the steepest rate of contraction since January 2023.
Both output and new orders declined significantly amid persistent cost pressures and softer demand.
Input costs rose at the fastest pace since January 2023, driven by higher fuel and material prices linked to Middle East tensions.
In response, firms cut purchasing and reduced headcount to contain costs.
Order books contracted sharply, pulling down output, while weak demand was broad-based, especially in manufacturing and wholesale & retail.
On the cost front, selling prices rose at the strongest pace since August 2024 as firms passed on higher costs despite weak demand.
Meanwhile, purchasing activity fell and input orders were reduced, reflecting softer sales and tighter operating conditions.
Looking ahead, business confidence remained subdued regarding year-ahead output.