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UAE non-oil private sector growth slows to near four-year low in March, PMI shows

By Thomson Reuters Apr 2, 2026 | 11:20 PM

April 3 (Reuters) – The United Arab Emirates’ non-oil private sector activity expanded at its weakest pace in nearly four years in March as the ​Middle East conflict hit demand and disrupted ‌supply chains, a business survey showed on Friday.

The seasonally adjusted S&P Global UAE Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) fell to 52.9 in March from 55.0 in February, the lowest level since July 2025, ‌although ​still in growth territory.

Output and new ⁠order growth slowed markedly, ⁠with the output subindex falling to 54.9 – the softest pace of growth since June 2021 – from February’s 61.8.

Demand growth also softened, with the new orders subindex ​retreating to 54.5 from 59.5 in February, marking the slowest expansion since August last year.

“Anecdotal comments ⁠suggested that sectors such as tourism, ⁠retail and logistics were the most ​affected, whereas segments such as technology and construction signalled a ​softer, but still notable impact,” said David Owen, ‌senior economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence.

He added that while the war had taken a toll on the non-oil private sector overall in March, for many firms ⁠orders books were resilient and output expanded.

Supplier delivery times lengthened for the first time since September 2021 after the closure ⁠of the ‌Strait of Hormuz, while backlogs of work ⁠increased at the fastest pace so far ​this ‌year.

Business expectations for the next 12 ​months fell ⁠to their lowest level in just over five years.

The headline PMI in Dubai, the region’s business and tourism hub, fell to 53.2 from 54.6, the weakest improvement in non-oil business conditions for nine months.

(Reporting by Reuters; Editing ​by Hugh Lawson)