Optimism among small and medium-sized manufacturers rebounded
sharply in the three months to January, but this failed to boost
output and orders, according to the latest quarterly CBI SME Trends
Survey.
The survey of 279 SME manufacturers reported that
optimism about the business situation rose at the strongest pace
since April 2014 in the quarter to January. The upward swing in
growth from the previous quarter was the largest improvement in
optimism in a single quarter in the survey’s history (since
October 1988). Optimism about export prospects also rose for the
first time since July 2018.
However, output volumes and domestic orders fell in
the three months to January, while export orders were flat. But
output and domestic orders are expected to grow in the quarter
ahead.
Chiming with the weak activity this quarter, numbers
employed fell (at a similar pace to the previous three months)
and are expected to remain flat in the next
quarter.
Investment intentions for the year ahead improved
across the board. Spending plans for buildings, plant &
machinery and product & process innovation all rose above
their long-run averages, though point to only flat or slightly
higher capital spending in the next twelve months. Furthermore,
SME manufacturers still expect to cut back on investment in
training & retraining, where investment plans remain below
historic norms.
Labour shortages rose further as a cited constraint
on capital spending, reaching another survey high.
Alpesh Paleja, CBI Lead Economist,
said:
“It’s brilliant the UK’s small and medium-sized
manufacturers are feeling markedly more optimistic about the
business outlook, with the outlook for activity and investment
looking more hopeful too.
“But scratch the surface, and it seems that SME
manufacturers are still struggling. This continues the theme seen
across the recent swathe of economic data: sentiment and
expectations clearly improving, but little sign of it feeding
through to activity.
“Furthermore, businesses are still grappling with
longer-term uncertainty around the end state of Brexit. It’s the
vital the Government works quickly to secure a good trade deal
with the European Union: one that shores up British
manufacturers, protects jobs and allows industry to
grow.”
Key findings – three months to
January
-
45% of small and medium enterprise (SME)
manufacturers said they were more optimistic regarding their
business situation, while 14% said they were less optimistic,
giving a rounded balance of +32% (up from -32% in October 2019
– the biggest swing since the survey’s inception in October
1988). This is the strongest balance since April 2014 (+36%).
Optimism about export prospects for the year ahead also rose
(+7%), for the first time since July 2018 (+8%)
-
22% of firms said output increased and 29% said it
decreased, giving a rounded balance of -7%. Growth is expected
to rally next quarter (+18%)
-
30% of firms reported an increase in total new
orders, and 38% said they decreased, giving a rounded balance
of -7%. New orders are expected to rise (+18%) over the coming
quarter
-
28% of firms said domestic orders increased and 35%
said they decreased, giving a balance of -7% (from -12% in
October 2019). Domestic orders are expected to grow (+14%) over
the next three months
-
23% of firms reported an increase in export orders
and 23% said they fell, giving a rounded balance of -1%. Firms
anticipate export orders will remain broadly flat (+1%) next
quarter
-
Numbers employed continued to fall, with 13% of
firms saying they had seen growth in headcount and 20% saying
they had seen a reduction, giving a rounded balance of -8%
(from -5% in the three months to October)
-
SME manufacturers’ investment plans for buildings
(-3%), plant & machinery (+1%) and product and process
innovation (+6%) all rose above their long-run averages (-17%,
-7% and +8% respectively)
-
Average domestic prices were flat (+1%) and export
prices fell (-11%), but both are expected to rise in the next
quarter (+11% and +18% respectively).
Notes to Editors:
The January 2020 CBI Quarterly SME Trends
Survey was conducted between 16th December 2019
and 13th January 2020. 279 SME manufacturing firms
replied.