Saudi business conditions slowed to 2-year lows in January – PMI

Saudi business conditions slowed to 2-year lows in January – PMI



Business activities in Saudi Arabia have slowed to two-year lows, with increased cost pressures and softening demand affecting growth in the kingdom’s non-oil private sector, according to January’s Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI). The Riyad Bank Saudi Arabia PMI for January dipped to 55.4 from December’s 57.5, signalling a weak improvement in the health of the country’s non-oil economy. Even though business activity levels expanded at their slowest pace since 2022, it continued to increase across sectors due to a rise in new business intakes. The rate of sales growth eased to a five-month low. Several businesses reported a slowdown in demand amid competitive pressures, while new export work dropped for the fourth time in six months. Increased levels of new business fuelled a rise in input demand as purchasing activity and inventory holdings grew. The rate of buying growth, though, slipped to an eight-month low as firms started to taper procurement trends amid tapered demand. Meanwhile, purchase prices rose at the sharpest rate since May 2012. Strong demand, higher material prices and greater supply chain risk were behind the increase, with some mentioning higher shipping costs amid the ongoing Red Sea crisis. Despite market conditions, output prices rose modestly as