Polish Factory Downturn Softens Further
2025-12-01 08:13
By
Kyrie Dichosa
1 min. read
Poland’s S&P Global Manufacturing PMI rose to 49.1 in November, compared to market expectations and October’s 48.8, marking the fifth consecutive improvement and the mildest deterioration in operating conditions in the current seven-month downturn.
Output fell only fractionally, as firms cited reduced orders and weaker demand, though some reported gains from new clients and clearing backlogs.
The contraction in new orders remained modest, while export sales increased for the first time since March.
Purchasing activity rose for the second straight month, although stocks of purchases continued to decline.
Employment fell again but at a slower pace.
Input prices increased for the first time in four months, albeit only slightly, while output prices were broadly unchanged following October’s discounting.
Business confidence stayed positive, supported by expectations of market expansion, new product launches, and stronger demand, though sentiment eased to a four-month low.