Business Standard

Services PMI hits 3-month high of 52.2

October factory orders at 4-month high; new businesses rise at 2nd highest pace in 2 years

- SUBHAYAN CHAKRABORT­Y

Aspurt in new orders in October meant that growth in services sector activity reached a threemonth high, showed the widely tracked Nikkei India Services Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI).

Services PMI for October climbed to 52.2, swinging up from 50.9 in September. The 50-point mark separates expansion from contractio­n.

In October, an accelerate­d upturn in new work became pronounced. It underpinne­d a quicker rise in activity and jobs, according to a report by IHS Markit, compiler of the PMI survey. Factory orders, which have continued to climb for eight months straight, reached a four-month high in November. On the other hand, the overall pace of expansion in new business in the private sector reached its second-highest level in two years. Favourable market conditions, a greater client base, and fruitful advertisin­g were pointed out as some of the factors behind the latest rise.

However, volatility has remained a hallmark of the sector over the past one year. Growth has remained erratic as the latest rise was preceded by a threemonth fall in the PMI. The sector has also seen contractio­n twice in the current calendar year as well as two separate months of very low growth. New business at services firms displayed the strongest upturn since July. All this growth had a cascading effect on payroll numbers at services firms, which continued to see more hirings for the 14th straight month. However, in October, hiring growth was the secondfast­est since March 2011. Job creation in the services sector continued to trump that in manufactur­ing.

But it was not enough to reduce the backlog of work at these companies, which continued to rise in October. The rate of backlog accumulati­on was the most marked in six months. Companies that reported higher levels of unfinished work mentioned delayed client payments as a key reason. Conversely, goods producers made further inroads into their backlogs, which fell for the second straight month.

Costs go down from September’ s 10-monthhigh

The higher employee count had a spiralling effect on costs which had otherwise reduced. “A robust expansion in workforce – one of the best seen for over seven-and-a-half years – added to firms’ expenses,” Pollyanna De Lima, principal economist at IHSMarkit, and author of the report, said.

Cost pressures faded in October, but service providers continued to report rising costs, especially for food and fuel. The waning of cost inflation, coupled with competitiv­e pressures, resulted in only a marginal uptick in charges and moderated significan­tly from September’s 10-month high, Lima said.

With purchasing costs among manufactur­ers also rising at a slower pace, input price inflation across the private sector abated. Companies that raised selling prices mentioned the passthroug­h of greater cost burdens to clients. Neverthele­ss, some companies reported having avoided price hikes due to competitiv­e pressures. By comparison, a marginal and softer increase in factory gate charges was recorded.

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 ??  ?? Note : A figure above 50 means expansion while below that means contractio­n Source: IHS Markit
Note : A figure above 50 means expansion while below that means contractio­n Source: IHS Markit

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