UK Private Sector Output Unexpectedly Rebounds
2026-04-23 08:50
By
Andre Joaquim
1 min. read
The S&P Global UK Composite PMI jumped to 52.0 in April of 2026 from 50.3 in the previous month, well above expectations of 49.8 to reflect fresh traction in the British private-sector economic output.
The pickup in momentum was observed in both manufacturing (51.8 vs 49.2 in March) and services (52.0 vs 50.5) to reflect marked resilience to macroeconomic headwinds from the war in Iran, namely the surge in energy and power prices.
New orders and business at the aggregate level was steady as moderate growth for goods producers offset the marginal reduction for services.
Still, the business outlook for goods producers was hit as the panel noted that many orders were placed from clients frontloading concerns of war-drive disruptions to come.
Employment decreased for the 19th strait month with firms blaming higher National Insurance contributions.
Meanwhile, input costs surged the most on record for services providers, driving aggregate charge inflation to its highest since June 2022.