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UK Factory Orders Contract at Fastest Pace since 2020, CBI

May 21 (Reuters) - British factory orders contracted this month at the fastest rate since September 2020 and ​expectations for selling prices surged, according to ‌a survey on Thursday that illustrated the dilemma facing the Bank of England.

The Confederation of British Industry's monthly ​balance of total new orders slid to -41 ​in May from -38 in April.

A gauge of expected ⁠selling prices rose to its highest since ​February 2023.

"Against an increasingly uncertain global backdrop, the ​conflict in the Middle East is feeding through to higher energy costs and renewed supply chain disruption, adding another ​layer of challenges for manufacturers, who are already ​grappling with weak demand," Cameron Martin, CBI senior economist, said.

A ‌separate ⁠survey of manufacturers published earlier on Thursday by S&P Global showed British firms reported a rush of orders - but the increase was largely due to ​clients trying ​to get ⁠ahead of possible further price increases or supply chain problems linked to ​the Iran war.

The BoE is watching ​to see ⁠whether it needs to raise interest rates to snuff out the inflationary pressures sparked by the ⁠Iran ​war energy price shock or ​whether the hit to demand means any uptick in headline inflation ​proves short-lived.

Reporting by Andy Bruce Editing by William Schomberg

Source: Reuters


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