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S&P Global PMI Shows Sharpest Rise in UK Manufacturing Input Costs Since 1992 Amid Iran War Disruptions A flash S&P Global Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) survey released on March 24, 2026, reveals that British businesses experienced the slowest pace of activity growth in six months during March due to the ongoing US-Israeli war with Iran. The composite PMI, covering manufacturing and non-retail services, fell to 51.0 from 53.7 in February, remaining in expansion territory but signaling clear economic strain. Manufacturers faced the most dramatic impact, with input costs surging at the fastest monthly rate since the 1992 sterling crisis following Black Wednesday. This sharp acceleration was driven primarily by soaring prices for fuel, transportation, and energy-intensive raw materials, as Brent crude oil rose nearly 50% and natural gas prices jumped over 90% since hostilities began on February 28. Businesses responded by raising their own prices at the quickest pace since April 2025, while employment in the sector declined for the 18th consecutive month. The report highlights how the conflict has led to lost business through customer risk aversion, supply chain fractures, travel disruptions, and higher interest rates. Chief Business Economist Chris Williamson at S&P Global noted that these figures demonstrate materialized downside risks to growth and upside risks to inflation. The Bank of England now faces a delicate balancing act to prevent an energy-driven inflation spike from becoming entrenched without overly tightening policy and worsening the slowdown. Markets have priced in a potential 0.5 percentage point Bank rate hike by year-end. Even with ceasefire hopes, elevated energy costs are expected to persist due to damage to Gulf infrastructure, underscoring the war's broad economic ripple effects on the UK.

S&P Global PMI Shows Sharpest Rise in UK Manufacturing Input Costs Since 1992 Amid Iran War Disruptions

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Small U.S. Businesses Struggle as China Tariffs Hit Hard ‘Nowhere to Turn’: Small Businesses Struggle to Survive Amid Soaring China Tariffs NEW YORK — For many American small business

U.S. Small Businesses Face Inventory Woes and Lost Sales
#SmallBusinessStruggles #ChinaTariffs #TradeWarImpact #MadeInChina #ImportCosts #AmericanEntrepreneurs #TariffTrouble #BusinessShutdown #SupplyChainCrisis #FamilyBusiness #USChinaTrade #TrumpTariffs #MainStreetUSA #ManufacturingCosts

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5/10 The math is grim: Trump has already imposed 25% duties on many Canadian and Mexican products, 10% on energy, 25% on steel and aluminum, and now plans 25% on foreign-assembled vehicles—with threats of more to come.
#ManufacturingCosts #TariffStacking

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4/8 Last month's flat 25% tariff on steel and aluminum imports—imposed without exceptions—was designed to boost domestic industry but has already contributed to escalating trade tensions worldwide and rising costs for American manufacturers.
#ManufacturingCosts

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America’s Factories Will Pay
Trump says tariffs will bring jobs back. The reality? Higher costs, fewer exports, and lower margins for U.S. businesses. The trade war is hitting where it hurts. 🏭
#ManufacturingCosts #TradeWar #EconomicPolicy #TariffImpact https://buff.ly/3WFlNQz

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Manufacturing at Risk
A 25% tariff on Canada & Mexico threatens 930,000+ U.S. auto jobs. American manufacturers rely on low-cost inputs from North America. Trump’s move could cripple the industry. 🚗
#ManufacturingCosts #TradeWar #USMCA #GlobalTrade https://buff.ly/3WFlNQz

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