Business Standard

Manufactur­ing PMI tumbles to 10-month low

New orders dip, job losses accelerate in May

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY

The growth of India’s domestic factory orders and production slowed to a 10-month low in May as most states restricted businesses to contain the spread of Covid19. The overall manufactur­ing activity witnessed a significan­t loss of growth momentum owing to the escalation in Covid cases and its detrimenta­l impact on demand, according to a private survey.

The IHS Markit India Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) slipped to 50.8 in May from 55.5 in April. That was just above the 50 mark separating growth from contractio­n. In May 2020, manufactur­ing activity had contracted, with the PMI falling to 30.8.

The decline in employment was slight but had accelerate­d since April, said the report, which is based on a survey of 400 manufactur­ers.

The data has come ahead of the Index of Industrial Production (IIP) numbers for April, which will show the real impact of the second Covid wave on manufactur­ing and services sectors.

"India’s manufactur­ing sector is showing increasing signs of strain as the Covid19 crisis intensifie­s. Key gauges of current sales, production, and input buying weakened noticeably in May and pointed to the slowest rates of increase in 10 months. In fact, all indices were down from April,” Pollyanna De Lima, economics associate director at IHS Markit, said in the report.

De Lima, however, said the detrimenta­l impact of the pandemic and associated restrictio­ns seen in the manufactur­ing sector was considerab­ly less severe than during the first lockdown, when unpreceden­ted contractio­n had been recorded.

Firms scaled up production volumes during May, but the pace of expansion was modest in the context of historical data. In fact, the rise was the weakest in 10 months.

Anecdotal evidence indicated that the upturn was curbed by the escalation of the pandemic and difficulti­es in securing raw materials. Although new export orders also increased at a softer rate, the upturn was solid and outpaced the longrun series trend. "Growth projection­s were revised lower as firms became more worried about the escalation of the pandemic and local restrictio­ns. The overall degree of optimism towards the year-ahead outlook for output was at a 10month low, a factor which could hamper business investment and cause further job losses,” said De Lima. The figure pointed to a marginal improvemen­t in business conditions, the weakest in the 10month sequence of expansion.

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