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Economic news
18.12.2024

UK manufacturers’ order book balance worsens much more than anticipated in December, - CBI’s report shows

The survey by the Confederation of British Industry (CBI) showed on Wednesday that the UK manufacturers' order books worsened sharply in December relative to November, hitting a 4-year low. 

According to the report, the CBI's monthly factory order book balance plunged to -40 this month from -19 in the previous month. The December figure was the lowest since November 2020 (-40) and below both “normal” and its long-run average (-13). 

Economists had anticipated the reading to decrease to -22.

The survey also revealed that the manufacturing output volumes fell in the three months to December at a steeper pace than in the quarter to November (-25, the lowest since August 2020, compared to -12 in the three months to November), and were expected to decline again in the quarter to March 2025 (-31).

In other survey results, expectations for average selling price inflation increased significantly in December (+23, compared to +11 in November), strongly exceeding the long-run average (+7). Stocks of finished goods were considered as more than “adequate” in December and to a similar extent as in the previous month (+20, compared to +21 in November), with stock adequacy remaining well above the long-run average (+12).

Commenting on the latest monthly CBI Industrial Trends, Ben Jones, CBI lead economist, noted that manufacturing output appears to have contracted during the fourth quarter, with conditions across the sector looking more challenging than at any time since the COVID pandemic in 2020. “Manufacturers are facing a perfect storm of weakening external demand on the one hand, amid political instability in some key European markets and uncertainty over US trade policy,” he added. “And on the other hand, domestic business confidence has collapsed in the wake of the Budget, which has increased costs and led to widespread reports of project cancellations and falling orders.”

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