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Italian manufacturing cost pressures continue to mount, PMI shows

June 1, 2026 3:55 AM EDT

A worker looks on as tiles stand on conveyor rollers at Gruppo Romani ceramics factory production line. Italy's ceramic tile district of Sassuolo, responsible for more than 80% of national output, is among Europe's most energy‑intensive manufacturing hu

ROME, June 1 (Reuters) - Cost ‌pressures in ​Italy's manufacturing ​sector rose for a fifth month running in May, fuelled by the conflict in the Middle East, a ‌survey showed on Monday.

The measure of input cost inflation ⁠in the Italian S&P Global Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) accelerated to 76.5 from ‌75.4 in April, the highest ‌reading since May 2022.

Italian consumer price inflation jumped to 3.3% in May, preliminary data showed last week, as energy costs surged.

The ​headline PMI, a broader gauge of manufacturing activity, rose to 52.9, its highest level in more than four years, from ⁠April's 52.1, climbing further above the 50-mark that separates growth from contraction.

A Reuters survey of ​nine analysts had pointed to a 51.9 reading in May.

The new orders sub-index rose to 51.2 from ​49.1 in April to post its highest ‌reading in six months, while the output sub-index reached 53.2 from 52.4 the month before, a level ⁠not seen since March 2023.

The improvement in order book volumes probably "reflected clients' attempts to build safety reserves due to shortages and expected price increases," ⁠S&P Global said in its report, suggesting that concerns remained around the Middle ​East conflict.

"This new improvement in demand seen across the sector is likely to be unsustainable when the boost from stockpiling inevitably fades," said S&P Global ‌economist Eleanor Dennison.

Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's government in April cut its economic growth outlook to 0.6% for ‌this year and next from previous targets of 0.7% and 0.8% ⁠respectively.

The government forecast a 0.8% ‌growth rate for ​2028, which would mark six consecutive years of sub-1% growth.

(Reporting by Antonella Cinelli, editing by Gavin Jones and ‌Toby Chopra)



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