Personal Wealth Management / Market Analysis

What the Latest Global Flash PMIs Reveal

Early signs point to a better-than-feared economic environment.

For weeks now, pundits have warned the Middle East conflict and its resulting economic disruptions could whack the global economy à la pandemic-era lockdowns. We think that narrative is overwrought and, last week, we finally got our first bit of war-affected economic data: S&P Global’s flash (preliminary) purchasing managers’ indexes (PMIs, surveys tallying the breadth of growth). While March’s reports weren’t gangbusters, they point to a still-growing global economy holding up better than many feared at the war’s outset—an early indication hinting at reality going better than expected.

Let us start with the data: Exhibit 1 runs through major developed economies’ March flash PMIs and how they compare with February’s final data. For context, readings above 50.0 indicate more firms reporting expansion than contraction. While this doesn’t tell you how much firms or overall activity grew, a majority of firms reporting growth generally translates to rising activity.

Exhibit 1: March Flash PMIs


Source: S&P Global, as of 3/24/2026.

As you can see, March’s results were a mixed bag. Most composite PMIs—which combine services and manufacturing—moderated from February but remained in expansion, indicating the majority of respondents in the developed world kept growing amid the chaos. Only France and Australia contracted, with the former’s weak patch predating the war.

Conventional wisdom holds that manufacturing is more vulnerable to wartime disruptions than services, given it is more energy-intensive and relies on global shipping and supply chains. Services are generally more insulated. Yet across the board, services fared worse than manufacturing in every country but Japan. Yes, new manufacturing orders and output fell slightly in Australia, and both measures cooled in Japan.[i] But March’s flash manufacturing PMIs topped 50 across the board.

A key reason, in our view, is the war pulling demand forward. Consider: New manufacturing orders grew in the US, UK and Germany, with all three reports citing companies loading up inventories ahead of potential price pressures and supply constraints.[ii] Germany’s report outright suggests the war’s outbreak boosted demand, highlighting spiking new orders and the country’s fastest production growth in four years. Likewise, US respondents reported that, while tariffs weighed less on new orders, companies chiefly added to their input inventories—the first rise in seven months—to ensure supply availability and lock in prices.[iii]

Interestingly, though the UK reported similarly expansionary results, most analysis we saw focused heavily on accelerating cost pressures. This aligns with headlines’ recent hyper focus on the UK’s relatively warmer inflation than other developed nations, suggesting sentiment toward Britain remains skeptical. It also suggests many in Britain, still stung by 2022, are fighting the last war from a sentiment perspective.

In our view, manufacturers’ stocking warehouses to meet future demand is a sign of their adapting. We have long said that anticipation is mitigation, helping shield against the possibility of shortages. To be clear, one month’s data isn't a trend. But manufacturing demand wasn’t uniformly negative, which is a good thing.

Meanwhile, other tidbits suggest firms are already adapting to wartime challenges. The UK’s report, for instance, noted longer shipping times as cargo ships re-routed around Africa’s Cape of Good Hope.[iv] Some pundits couched this as a negative as manufacturers had to wait a bit longer for their deliveries, which has some merit. But this is also an underappreciated positive—it signals logistics companies are already adapting to widely feared blockages, just weeks in. A bit longer delivery time is far better than shortages.

Relatedly, in the eurozone, longer delivery times coincided with manufacturers’ first purchasing growth in 44 months.[v] Rather than reacting to disruptions, European manufacturers opted to preemptively restock their shelves and reroute their imported inputs. Again, they acted in anticipation of the looming war potentially blocking key shipping lanes and sending prices skyward.

Global manufacturers aren’t taking this situation lying down. As is typical, they are responding to incentives and getting ahead of the curve—a positive reminder of global trade’s underrated adaptability. This is a crucial departure from the pandemic, when sudden global lockdowns confounded planning.

To us, services’ relative weakness seems more about sentiment and uncertainty than a sea change in business conditions. For instance, Australia, France and Germany’s reports all noted falling new business in the service sector as customers delayed purchases awaiting clarity in the Middle East.[vi] Or take the US and UK, where purchasing managers reported customers were hesitant to commit to additional projects and orders due to geopolitical uncertainty (among other factors, including concerns over federal spending).

This uncertainty is quite normal early in geopolitical conflicts, coinciding with the broader shock factor as folks step back to assess what is going on. Stocks tend to price this at the outset, falling in the immediate aftermath as sentiment sinks—as seen in widely watched sentiment gauges like the University of Michigan (U-Mich) Index of Consumer Sentiment or American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) Investor Sentiment survey. [vii] For example, both fell at the start of 2006’s Israel-Hezbollah conflict and 1990’s Operation Desert Storm as people feared for the worst.[viii] Yet stocks typically recover quickly as businesses and individuals get clarity on what the mid-war economy looks like and corporate investment—growth’s driver—resumes. 

Looking forward, we will keep an eye on the global services sector as it is responsible for the bulk of developed economies’ economic output. Yet as uncertainty begins falling among businesses and individuals, markets should receive a boost. Otherwise, March’s release points to global manufacturing’s resilience—a bit more bullish proof of a better-than-feared global economy.


[i] Source: S&P Global, as of 3/25/2026.

[ii] Ibid.

[iii] Ibid.

[iv] Ibid.

[v] Ibid.

[vi] Ibid.

[vii] Source: University of Michigan and American Association of Individual Investors, as of 3/25/2026.

[viii] Ibid.


If you would like to contact the editors responsible for this article, please message MarketMinder directly.

*The content contained in this article represents only the opinions and viewpoints of the Fisher Investments editorial staff.

Get a weekly roundup of our market insights

Sign up for our weekly e-mail newsletter.

A couple talk with a business woman inside of an office with glass walls

You Imagine Your Future. We Help You Get There.

Are you ready to start your journey to a better financial future?

A dark green book cover with a title that reads "Stock Market Outlook." There is a sub-banner stating "Independent Research & Analysis. Published Quarterly by the Investment Policy Committee" ending with a fisher investments logo at the bottom.

Where Might the Market Go Next?

Confidently tackle the market’s ups and downs with independent research and analysis that tells you where we think stocks are headed—and why.

Learn More

Learn why 195,000 clients trust us to manage their money and how Fisher Investments and its affiliates may be able to help you achieve your financial goals.

As of 12/31/2025

New to Fisher? Call Us.

(888) 823-9566

Contact Us Today