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French manufacturing grew in June by more than first forecast, final PMI shows

By Thomson Reuters Jul 1, 2026 | 2:57 AM

PARIS, July 1 (Reuters) – France’s manufacturing activity grew slightly faster in June than initially forecast, despite ongoing supply-chain pressures caused by transport disruptions ​due to the Iran war, a business ‌survey showed on Wednesday.

The S&P Global France Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) rose to 51.2 points in June from 49.7 in May.

Any figure above 50 points shows growth, while below 50 points ‌denotes ​a contraction in activity.

The final ⁠June PMI figure of ⁠51.2 points was stronger than the flash reading of 50.7 points, and it showed a return to growth after that index had fallen below the ​50 points level from April to May.

S&P Global said French manufacturers had recorded higher volumes of ⁠outstanding work compared with May ⁠and that there had also been an ​increase in backlogs of work in June.

“Manufacturers in France ​remain under pressure, but it’s a positive sign ‌that the downturn didn’t worsen in June. PMI price indices coming down from May is also good news and could be a harbinger of lower inflation, ⁠both in manufacturing and the economy more broadly,” said Joe Hayes, economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence.

Hayes added, however, that ⁠supply chain ‌pressures were continuing to weigh on ⁠the manufacturing sector.

“Poor transport availability was often ​mentioned ‌and the survey data showed that firms ​preferred to ⁠buy less and use up inventories. How long disruption persists in supply chains could also be a factor that determines how quickly France’s manufacturing economy can turn things around,” he added.

(Reporting by Sudip Kar-Gupta; Editing ​by Hugh Lawson)