South Africa Private Sector Remains Stagnant
2026-03-04 07:23
By
Kyrie Dichosa
1 min. read
The S&P Global South Africa PMI was unchanged at 50 in February 2026, signaling stable private-sector business conditions for a second consecutive month after weakness in late 2025.
Output was broadly unchanged, supported by firms clearing backlogs, while new orders declined slightly.
The continued fall in outstanding work pointed to a weaker pipeline and a cautious near-term outlook.
Employment rebounded with a modest rise in staffing, though inventories declined again amid restrained purchasing.
Supplier delivery times worsened slightly but delays were less severe than earlier in the year.
Input cost pressures remained subdued thanks to a stronger rand and lower fuel prices, even as wage inflation hit a seven-month high.
Softer overall cost burdens enabled firms to lower selling prices for the first time since May 2025.
Business confidence eased to its lowest level since July 2021, despite expectations that easing inflation and potential rate cuts could support growth.