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PMI data shows that growth in the UAE's non-oil private sectors has picked up in February.

According to a'monthly survey' completed just days before the United States, the non-oil sector of the United Arab Emirates expanded at the fastest rate for the past 12 months during?February. This was due to increased output and new order, which were largely responsible. Israel and the United States launched airstrikes against Iran.

The seasonally-adjusted UAE Purchasing Managers' Index, released on Wednesday, rose from 54.9 to 55.0, indicating a strong expansion in the sectors of construction,'real estate', logistics and technology.

The pace of growth slowed from the near-two-year high reached in January. The subindex for new orders fell from 60.0 in January to 59.5 in the month of February. David Owen, senior analyst at 'S&P Global Market Intelligence', stated that the data so far 'pointed towards an encouraging picture for the domestic economic in the first quarter. Dubai is the commercial and tourism center of the Gulf, as well as a leader in efforts to diversify the Gulf's economy away from hydrocarbons. The strikes against Iran, which began on?Saturday, have caused the largest business disruptions in the region, since the COVID-19 Pandemic. Airports are closed and port operations are halted. Tourism and logistics are expected to be affected by the repercussions. JPMorgan cut its non-oil 2026 growth forecast by 0.3 percentage point for the Gulf Region and by 0.4 for the UAE on Monday, warning of larger revisions to come.

The February survey revealed that input costs eased and inflation cooled from January's 18-month high. Employment rose modestly as firms increased their workforce to handle rising workloads.

The headline PMI in Dubai fell to 54.6 from 55.9 last month, which indicates a softening of the operating conditions. (Reporting and Editing by Hugh Lawson).

(source: Reuters)