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PMI: Growth in the UAE's non-oil private sectors slows down as Iran War weighs on it

A?survey on Tuesday showed that the UAE's private non-oil sector expanded at the slowest rate since February 2021, as the Iran War?hammered tourism and shipping, impacting sales and exports.

The S&P Global Purchasing Managers Index for the UAE fell from 52.9 to 52.1, but remained in growth territory over 50.

The subindex fell to 52.5 from 54.5 in March, the lowest reading in over five years. The drop in foreign sales, excluding the pandemic season, was the biggest since the survey started in August 2009.

The output still increased?strongly but at a slower pace. This was helped by the existing infrastructure and project work. The purchasing growth was'modest' as high costs, weak sales, and supply constraints slowed demand.

David Owen, Senior Economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence, said: "The non-oil sector in the?UAE?showed a further decline in momentum during April. Operating conditions showed their lowest performance since more than five year,"

"That said... the strength of the non oil private sector, as highlighted by yet another increase in output, means that companies expect to see growth continue for the next twelve months." The International Monetary Fund said in April that energy disruptions caused by the Iran War will have a 'heavy impact' on the economies of Gulf oil and natural gas exporters.

In April, the UAE experienced a sharp increase in price pressures. Input cost inflation reached its highest level since July 2024 and sales prices rose at their fastest rate since June 2011.

Expectations for the coming year have risen to a 3-month high.

The headline PMI for Dubai, the region's main business and tourism center, fell to 51.6 from 53.2 in march, a 55 month low. However, more firms expressed optimism regarding a recovery of demand conditions in general. (Reporting and editing by Hugh Lawson; Staff Reporting)

(source: Reuters)