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Output growth in the West Midlands maintained in November - report

Firms become more optimistic about the year-ahead outlook for business activity

Rashel Chowdhury, from NatWest's Midlands and east regional board

Resilient demand for West Midlands goods and services underpinned sustained growth of new business and output midway through the fourth quarter, according to the latest NatWest PMI data.

Firms also became more optimistic about the year-ahead outlook for business activity, a factor that spurred recruitment efforts. Price pressures intensified, but remained among the weakest in around three years.

The monthly report, a seasonally adjusted index that measures the month-on-month change in the combined output of the region’s manufacturing and service sectors, was little-changed from October's reading of 50.7, registering 50.6 in November to signal a marginal increase in output.

Rising intakes of new work and better demand trends encouraged growth, anecdotal evidence showed. Private sector companies in the West Midlands continued to report higher intakes of new work during November, thereby stretching the current sequence of expansion to ten months.

Demand resilience, restocking efforts among clients and growing market shares reportedly underpinned the uptick. That said, the rate of increase in overall sales was marginal and softer than that recorded in October.

Local firms registered the second-best trend for new orders regionally, behind London. Business confidence in the West Midlands remained positive in November, with the overall level of sentiment improving since October to move further above its long-run average.

Local firms generally foresee better demand and economic conditions in the year ahead, though investment and marketing initiatives also boosted optimism. West Midlands companies were the most upbeat regionally.