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UK Builders Report Biggest Leap in Cost Inflation on Record, PMI

LONDON, April 8 (Reuters) - British construction firms reported the biggest rise in cost inflation from one month to the next on record in March ​and the Iran war also hit new orders and confidence ‌in the sector, a survey showed on Wednesday.

S&P Global's UK Construction Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) measure of input cost inflation leapt to 70.5 from 59.5 in February, ​the biggest such jump since the series began in 1997 ​and reaching its highest level outright since November 2022.

British manufacturers last ⁠week reported the biggest month-on-month jump in the rate at which ​their cost burdens are increasing since October 1992.

New orders for construction firms ​fell at the fastest pace since November last year and a recent recovery in expectations for future output among businesses faded.

S&P Global's headline index for the construction ​sector remained below the 50.0 growth threshold for the 15th month ​in a row although it edged up slightly to 45.6 from 44.5 in February.

The ‌most ⁠recent official construction data showed a 0.2% rise in output in January after shrinking 2% in the final quarter of 2025.

Tim Moore, economics director at S&P Global Market Intelligence, said some businesses reported a ​turnaround in infrastructure ​work, especially in ⁠the energy sector, but the near-term outlook for the sector as a whole was challenging.

Rising inflation pressures, ​gloomy economic prospects and higher borrowing costs were worrying ​executives while ⁠shipping delays caused by disruption in the Strait of Hormuz meant supply chain performance worsened for the first time since mid-2025.

The all-sector PMI - which ⁠includes ​manufacturers and services firms, which have reported ​similar fallout from the war in Iran - dropped to 49.9 from 52.9 in February, reaching ​its lowest since last September.

Writing by William Schomberg; Editing by Hugh Lawson

Source: Reuters


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