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Spain’s manufacturing growth slows as supply delays intensify, PMI shows

By Thomson Reuters Jun 1, 2026 | 2:24 AM

MADRID, June 1 (Reuters) – Spain’s manufacturing sector expanded modestly in May, at a slightly slower pace than in April, as disruptions linked to the Middle East conflict ​worsened supply delays, raised costs and weighed on demand, ‌a business survey showed on Monday.

In the survey by S&P Global, the country’s Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) fell to 51.2 in May from 51.7 in April. The 50-mark separates growth from contraction.

“May indicated a partial reversal ‌of ​last month’s safety stock-driven manufacturing sector ⁠growth,” said Paul Smith, ⁠Economics Director at S&P Global Market Intelligence.

“This was linked to the dual forces of elevated prices and ongoing uncertainty, which were seen by manufacturers as negatively impacting client budgets and ​resulting in a drop in their sales over the month,” Smith added.

Output rose for a second month, but only ⁠marginally and at a weaker pace ⁠than in April. Respondents linked the slowdown to ​weaker incoming demand after new orders fell for the fifth time ​in six months.

Export demand also remained under pressure. New ‌export orders declined for a ninth straight month, although the rate of contraction was the weakest since February.

The pace of job cuts was marginal and the weakest since February.

Supply strains intensified ⁠sharply. Vendor performance deteriorated to the greatest extent in four years, while input price inflation hit a four-year high.

Confidence improved to a ⁠three-month high from March’s ‌near two-and-a-half-year low, but remained below its ⁠historical average as firms cited geopolitical uncertainty, weak ​demand ‌and the risk of further price rises.

The ​government expects ⁠the Spanish economy, which is among the top performers in Europe, to expand 2.2% this year after 2.8% in 2025, although it has acknowledged that the war in the Middle East could weigh on the forecast.

(Reporting by David Latona; Editing by Andrei Khalip ​and Toby Chopra)