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South Africa’s business activity remains stable in February, PMI shows

By Thomson Reuters Mar 4, 2026 | 1:18 AM

JOHANNESBURG, March 4 (Reuters) – South Africa’s private sector activity held steady in February, with the Purchasing Managers’ Index holding at 50.0 ​for the second straight month, an ‌S&P Global survey showed on Wednesday.

While output was stable, however, total sales volumes dipped, prompting firms to reduce order backlogs to sustain activity levels.

Business optimism fell ‌to ​its lowest since July 2021, ⁠with future output projections ⁠subdued due to a lack of new orders and caution about the economic outlook.

“Private sector conditions remained steady in February, as domestic ​companies indicated that they had secured enough work to keep business activity ticking along ⁠smoothly,” said David Owen, ⁠Senior Economist at S&P Global Market ​Intelligence.

However, he noted that “a shortage of order intakes made ​some firms hesitant to predict an expansion ‌in activity over the next 12 months.”

Employment saw a positive turn, with firms increasing staffing numbers after a slight reduction in the previous ⁠period.

Input price inflation remained mild, allowing businesses to lower selling prices for the first time since May ⁠2025. This ‌was attributed to a stronger rand ⁠against the U.S. dollar and ​lower fuel ‌prices, which helped moderate cost ​pressures.

Supplier delays ⁠persisted, though they were less severe than earlier in the year. Firms continued to manage inventories cautiously, with stocks decreasing for the third month in a row.

(Reporting by Johannesburg bureau; Editing by ​Hugh Lawson)