
PMI falls to 48.6 in April, signaling deeper contraction as firms face rising fuel and input prices, weaker demand, and growing geopolitical uncertainty
Hong Kong’s private-sector economy has contracted further as global energy disruptions linked to the Middle East conflict push up costs and weaken demand across services and industry.
The latest S&P Global Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) for Hong Kong fell to 48.6 in April from 49.3 in March, marking a second consecutive month below the 50-point threshold that separates expansion from contraction.
The reading is the weakest in ten months and signals a broad-based slowdown in business activity.
The index, based on a survey of roughly 400 firms, showed declines in both output and new orders, with production shrinking at its fastest pace since mid-2025. Employment also slipped for the first time in three months, reflecting reduced workloads and easing backlogs.
These trends indicate that firms are scaling back operations rather than preparing for near-term recovery.
A key driver behind the downturn is the escalation in global energy prices tied to the Middle East conflict.
Companies across Hong Kong reported higher fuel and input costs, with survey respondents explicitly linking worsening conditions to oil price volatility and supply-chain pressure.
Input cost inflation reached its highest level in more than 14 years, while firms simultaneously raised selling prices at the fastest pace since 2023 in an attempt to protect margins.
The cost shock is particularly significant for Hong Kong because the economy is heavily service-oriented and deeply integrated into global logistics, trade, and transportation networks.
Higher fuel costs therefore ripple quickly into shipping, aviation, retail distribution, and tourism-related services.
Even firms not directly exposed to energy markets face indirect pressure through supplier pricing and weaker consumer demand.
Demand conditions have also deteriorated.
New export orders fell again, reflecting weaker external demand and ongoing uncertainty in global markets.
While some firms reported modest improvement in foreign orders earlier in the year, that momentum has now reversed.
Domestic demand has not been strong enough to offset the external slowdown, leaving overall activity in contraction.
Business sentiment remains subdued.
Forward-looking indicators in the survey suggest that companies expect continued pressure over the coming months, citing geopolitical instability, volatile energy prices, and weakening global trade conditions.
Although some firms are still hiring selectively or increasing purchasing activity, these actions appear tactical rather than indicative of sustained expansion.
The broader context is that Hong Kong is now absorbing a combination of external shocks rather than experiencing a purely domestic slowdown.
The Middle East conflict has added a new inflationary layer to already fragile global demand conditions, reinforcing a pattern seen across multiple economies where PMI readings are weakening under the combined pressure of high costs and geopolitical risk.
As long as energy markets remain unstable and global demand remains uneven, Hong Kong’s private sector is likely to remain under pressure, with cost inflation and weak orders continuing to shape business decisions across industries.
The latest S&P Global Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) for Hong Kong fell to 48.6 in April from 49.3 in March, marking a second consecutive month below the 50-point threshold that separates expansion from contraction.
The reading is the weakest in ten months and signals a broad-based slowdown in business activity.
The index, based on a survey of roughly 400 firms, showed declines in both output and new orders, with production shrinking at its fastest pace since mid-2025. Employment also slipped for the first time in three months, reflecting reduced workloads and easing backlogs.
These trends indicate that firms are scaling back operations rather than preparing for near-term recovery.
A key driver behind the downturn is the escalation in global energy prices tied to the Middle East conflict.
Companies across Hong Kong reported higher fuel and input costs, with survey respondents explicitly linking worsening conditions to oil price volatility and supply-chain pressure.
Input cost inflation reached its highest level in more than 14 years, while firms simultaneously raised selling prices at the fastest pace since 2023 in an attempt to protect margins.
The cost shock is particularly significant for Hong Kong because the economy is heavily service-oriented and deeply integrated into global logistics, trade, and transportation networks.
Higher fuel costs therefore ripple quickly into shipping, aviation, retail distribution, and tourism-related services.
Even firms not directly exposed to energy markets face indirect pressure through supplier pricing and weaker consumer demand.
Demand conditions have also deteriorated.
New export orders fell again, reflecting weaker external demand and ongoing uncertainty in global markets.
While some firms reported modest improvement in foreign orders earlier in the year, that momentum has now reversed.
Domestic demand has not been strong enough to offset the external slowdown, leaving overall activity in contraction.
Business sentiment remains subdued.
Forward-looking indicators in the survey suggest that companies expect continued pressure over the coming months, citing geopolitical instability, volatile energy prices, and weakening global trade conditions.
Although some firms are still hiring selectively or increasing purchasing activity, these actions appear tactical rather than indicative of sustained expansion.
The broader context is that Hong Kong is now absorbing a combination of external shocks rather than experiencing a purely domestic slowdown.
The Middle East conflict has added a new inflationary layer to already fragile global demand conditions, reinforcing a pattern seen across multiple economies where PMI readings are weakening under the combined pressure of high costs and geopolitical risk.
As long as energy markets remain unstable and global demand remains uneven, Hong Kong’s private sector is likely to remain under pressure, with cost inflation and weak orders continuing to shape business decisions across industries.














































