UK factories cut staff at fastest pace since 2020 but optimism rises, PMI shows
British factories cut staff at the fastest pace in nearly five years last month as the government's payroll tax increase began to push up their costs and demand at home and abroad was weak, a survey showed on Monday.
But manufacturers also turned the most positive in six months as they hoped for a pick-up in the economy.
The S&P Global Purchasing Managers' Index for UK manufacturing remained below the 50.0 threshold that divides growth from contraction for a fifth month in a row, sinking to a 14-month low of 46.9 in February.
That was above a preliminary estimate for February of 46.4 but below January's 48.3.
The PMI's jobs measure fell to its lowest since May 2020 - early in the COVID-19 pandemic - with factories responding to a rise in their social security contributions bill by laying off temporary staff, reducing the working hours of some employees, making redundancies and not replacing leavers.
The rise in National Insurance Contributions - announced by finance minister Rachel Reeves last October to help pay for more public services and investment - takes effect on April 1. That is also the date for a nearly 7% increase in the minimum wage.
Firms told S&P Global that suppliers were putting up their prices ahead of the change.
In turn, manufacturers increased their selling prices by the most since April 2023, S&P Global said.
Demand from outside Britain remained weak with new export orders falling by the most in a year.
However, the survey's measure of business optimism rose to a six-month high in February, linked to investment spending, new business plans and hopes that economic conditions would strengthen.
Britain's economy showed almost no growth in the second half of last year and the Bank of England last month halved its economic growth forecast for 2025 to just 0.75%.
"This combination of absent growth and rising prices will contribute to a growing dilemma for the Bank of England over the coming months," Rob Dobson, Director at S&P Global Market Intelligence, said.
The final February PMI for Britain's much larger services sector is due on Wednesday.
Other figures have painted a less bleak picture of the jobs market than the PMI surveys, at least so far. Data provided by employers to the tax authorities showed the number of employees unexpectedly climbed by 21,000 in January from December.
The BoE is watching the jobs market closely as it gauges whether inflation pressures remain too strong for it to speed up its gradual pace of interest rate cuts. (Writing by William Schomberg Editing by Christina Fincher)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Arabian Post
15 hours ago
- Arabian Post
Bitcoin Solaris Set to Eclipse Polkadot's Growth Trajectory
Bitcoin Solaris is gaining rapid momentum, positioning itself as a potential outperformer of Polkadot's early expansion. Analysts and on‑chain metrics highlight growth indicators that not only replicate Polkadot's debut phase but in several cases significantly surpass it. Market observers attribute this shift to Solaris's mobile‑first mining approach, hybrid consensus architecture, and aggressive presale execution. Polkadot established its reputation through multi‑chain interoperability and shared security via parachains—a design emphasising developer adoption over mainstream user engagement. In contrast, Bitcoin Solaris is scaling through mass inclusivity. Its Solaris Nova app enables users to mine with everyday smartphones or PCs, eliminating the need for costly ASICs or complex infrastructure—barriers that still restrict Polkadot validator participation. This strategy has sparked an influx of retail interest, including among existing Polkadot investors turning to BTC‑S presale phases in search of higher short‑term returns. Solaris's roadmap reflects an ambition to execute where Polkadot encountered slowdowns. From launching testnet and mobile wallet in early 2026 to a full mainnet and exchange listings by late 2026, the timeline is concrete and time‑bound. In contrast, Polkadot's parachain roll‑out, while pioneering, has been criticised for complexity and slower-than-expected mainstream uptake. ADVERTISEMENT Technically, Solaris combines foundational Proof‑of‑Work for security with Delegated Proof‑of‑Stake for instant transactions and smart contracts. Its target throughput—10,000 to 100,000 TPS with finality in as little as two seconds—edges ahead of both Polkadot and competing layer‑1 networks. Validators rotate daily to enhance decentralisation, and its Helios security layer brings protocol-level safeguards comparable with Bitcoin's scarcity model and Solana's performance. Energy consumption is also a focal point. Solaris claims 99%+ savings in power usage compared with legacy mining operations. With escalating scrutiny of crypto's environmental impact, that low‑energy design resonates with both regulators and eco‑conscious investors. The presale narrative underscores urgency. Currently in mid‑phases, token pricing has ranged from US $2–8, with anticipated exchange‑launch pricing plateauing near US $20. This structure has already attracted over US $4–5 million in capital, and presale bonuses approach 12–14% per phase. Comparisons to Bitcoin's early growth phase are emerging. Financial analysts argue that Bitcoin Solaris's fixed supply, mobile mining model, and early‑stage presale echo crypto's 2013 dynamics. Even modest investments—US $1,000 today—are being framed as having potential to outperform multi‑thousand‑dollar Bitcoin buys over a similar timeframe. However, such enthusiasm is not without admonitions. As a relatively new protocol, Solaris remains in development, with adoption hinging upon mainstream acceptance of the Nova app, audit outcomes, smart contract integrity, and exchange listings. Polkadot's longevity and proven ecosystem via robust parachain deployment stand as a counterpoint—Solaris must demonstrate resilience under live load. The academic and developer communities have taken note of Polkadot's strengths—shared security via NPoS consensus, governance frameworks, and scholarly analysis of its sharding mechanisms. Yet critiques surrounding complexity, validator cost thresholds, and centralisation risks persist. By contrast, Solaris is proactively targeting those criticisms with user‑centric design, streamlined entry, and full audit transparency. Early data from presale participants suggests substantial uptake. West African and Southeast Asian communities—traditionally underrepresented in high‑end mining—are increasingly engaging through mobile mining accessibility. While precise regional figures are opaque, anecdotal evidence and community growth metrics from Solaris's Telegram and X channels point to significant global traction. Institutional interest remains unsubstantiated. Vertex Ventures and other blockchain‑focused funds have yet to announce allocations. Solaris's validation remains retail‑driven, though its governance plan includes institutional play in later roadmap phases. By contrast, Polkadot has cultivated grants via Web3 Foundation and tapped institutional bonds for parachain funding. As of now, the crypto community stands at a divergence point. One path reflects Polkadot's methodical but slower‑burn strategy, centred on developer utilisation and cross‑chain infrastructure. The other is a sprint toward inclusion, speed, and mobile participation via Bitcoin Solaris.

Economy ME
16 hours ago
- Economy ME
Bank of England maintains interest rates at 4.25 percent citing a 'highly unpredictable world'
The Bank of England (BoE) maintained the U.K. interest rates at 4.25 percent on Thursday, citing a 'highly unpredictable world' as the reason for this decision. The Bank's nine-member Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) voted with a majority of six to three in favor of keeping rates unchanged. Three committee members—Swati Dhingra, Dave Ramsden, and Alan Taylor—voted to lower the rate by 0.25 percentage points to 4 percent. Despite Thursday's decision, the Bank emphasized that interest rates are on a 'downward path.' The Monetary Policy Committee voted by a majority of 6-3 to keep interest rates at 4.25% Find out more: — Bank of England (@bankofengland) June 19, 2025 Andrew Bailey, the governor of the Bank of England, stated: 'Interest rates remain on a gradual downward path, although we've left them on hold today. The world is highly unpredictable. In the U.K. we are seeing signs of softening in the labour market. We will be looking carefully at the extent to which those signs feed through to consumer price inflation.' The last time the Bank cut interest rates was in May, when they were reduced by 0.25 percent to the current level of 4.25 percent. U.K. consumer prices increased by 3.4 percent in May on an annualized basis, representing a rise of 0.8 percentage points compared to March. Economists have chosen to overlook the reading from April due to a correction in the Office for National Statistics data. Read more: Bank of England slashes interest rates to 4.25 percent amid global trade uncertainty Norway's first rate cut since pandemic In a similar move, Norway's central bank has reduced interest rates by 25 basis points to 4.25 percent, marking the first cut since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic. Norges Bank had indicated in March that it anticipated lowering its key sight deposit rate in June and has now followed through on that plan. 'Inflation has declined since the monetary policy meeting in March, and the inflation outlook for the coming year indicates lower inflation than previously expected,' stated Ida Wolden Bache, the central bank's governor. 'A cautious normalization of the policy rate will pave the way for inflation to return to target without restricting the economy more than necessary.' The interest rate cuts were largely anticipated by economists.


Zawya
16 hours ago
- Zawya
As war and tariffs fog the outlook, some central banks trim rates
The Swiss and Norwegian central banks became the latest European rate-setters to ease monetary policy on Thursday, citing a weaker inflation outlook that contrasted sharply with the Federal Reserve's warnings about higher U.S. prices. The Bank of England kept rates on hold as expected, while flagging that they would remain on a "gradual downward path" in a finely balanced statement that also acknowledged "heightened unpredictability" in the global environment. U.S. President Donald Trump's haphazard threats of heavy trade tariffs and an escalating Israel-Iran conflict have left top central banks trying to steer policy in conditions of near-unprecedented uncertainty for the global economy. Speaking after a two-day meeting where Fed policymakers kept rates on hold, the U.S. central bank's chair Jerome Powell on Wednesday laid out how import tariffs imposed on America's trading partners will drive up prices for U.S. consumers. Trump is due in coming days to say whether tariffs currently pegged at a 10% baseline will rise - in some cases to more than double that level - in a move seen weakening the global economy and so keeping a lid on inflation pressures in many countries. "Inflationary pressure has decreased compared to the previous quarter," the Swiss National Bank said as it cut rates by 25 basis points to zero and did not rule out returning to negative rates. In a move that took most analysts by surprise, even Norway's central bank - long the most hawkish of major central banks - also cut its policy rate by 25 basis points said there were more cuts to come due to a more benign outlook for prices. "Inflation has declined since the monetary policy meeting in March, and the inflation outlook for the coming year indicates lower inflation than previously expected," Governor Ida Wolden Bache said of inflation which slowed to 2.8% in May. That mirrored the view taken by Sweden's central bank, which cut its key interest rate to 2.00% from 2.25% on Wednesday and said that, with price pressures weak, it may ease further before the end of the year to boost sluggish growth. On June 6, the European Central Bank cut its main interest rate for the eighth time in the past year and signalled a pause in policy easing at least next month because inflation was now safely back at its 2% target after three years of overshooting. CAUTION, LITTLE CONVICTION Earlier this week the Bank of Japan kept interest rates steady and said it would move cautiously in removing remnants of its massive, decade-long stimulus. Governor Kazuo Ueda said the BOJ's near-term focus was on downside risks, notably the hit from U.S. tariffs. The latest set of central bank decisions, covering most of the Group of 10 major currencies and their economies, gives a snapshot of the impact policymakers expect significantly less free global trade to have. For the U.S. economy, the Fed sketched a modestly stagflationary picture, with growth in 2025 slowing to 1.4%, unemployment rising to 4.5%, and inflation ending the year at 3%, well above the current level. Fed policymakers signalled borrowing costs are still likely to fall in 2025, but chair Powell cautioned against putting too much weight on that view. "No one holds these ... rate paths with a great deal of conviction, and everyone would agree that they're all going to be data-dependent," he said. For other economies, the consensus for now is that the tariffs will inevitably hit their local industries and so weaken growth and jobs - but at least their consumers will be spared the inflationary hit coming for their U.S. counterparts. That all could change, depending on whether the escalation of conflict in the Middle East drives oil prices substantially higher than the gains seen so far and whether America's trading partners end up retaliating with tariffs of their own. That will become clearer from July 9, when Trump has said countries will face higher tariffs across the board unless they reach a deal with him. (Additional reporting by Howard Schneider in Washington; Leika Kihara in Tokyo; Simon Johnson in Stockholm; Writing by Mark John; Editing by Catherine Evans)