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UK business activity falls for the first time since October 2023 as trade tensions hurt economy, and car sales slide – business live


UK business activity falls for the first time since October 2023 as trade tensions hurt economy

Newsflash: Business activity across the UK has fallen for the first time in 18 months, as trade war fears batter the British economy.

The latest poll of purchasing managers at UK service sector companies has found that business activity declined in April, ending a 17-month run of growth, and pulling the wider private sector into a contraction.

New order books at services companies shrank last month, driven by the fastest decline in exports since February 2021, when the Covid-19 pandemic was hitting activity.

Data provider S&P Global says that “survey respondents widely commented on risk aversion and delayed spending decisions among clients in response to rising global economic uncertainty.”

This dragged the S&P Global UK Services PMI Business Activity Index down to 49.0 in April, down from 52.5 in March, which is the lowest reading since January 2023. Any reading below 50 signals a contraction.

The PMI report says:

While many firms continued to report unfavourable domestic demand conditions, the latest survey indicated a particularly marked decline in new work from overseas markets.

The rate of contraction was the steepest for just over four years and mostly linked by survey respondents to the impact of rising global trade tensions.

S&P Global also reports that the wider UK private sector also contracted last month.

Its UK PMI Composite Output Index, which also tracks the manufacturing industry, fell to 48.5 in April, down from 51.5 in March and below the 50.0 no-change value for the first time in one-and-a-half years.

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Photograph: Daniele Mascolo/Reuters

Luxury car maker Ferrari has joined the pack of auto companies warning that the US trade war could hurt its earnings.

Ferrari reported a 13% rise in revenues in the first three months of this year, with operating profit up 23%.

“Another year is off to a great start” said Benedetto Vigna, CEO of Ferrari, explaining:

“In the first quarter of 2025, with very few incremental shipments year on year, all key metrics recorded double-digit growth, underscoring a strong profitability driven by our product mix and continued demand for personalizations.

Vigna added that Ferrari is “very excited about what lies ahead.”

But that roadmap includes the threat of tariffs – and Ferrari warns that the introduction of import tariffs on EU cars into the USA could knock 50 basis points (half a percentage point) off its profitability percentage margins this year.





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