Deccan Chronicle

Manufactur­ing pace slows to 4-month low

India witnessing consolidat­ion after expansion: PMI

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New Delhi, Feb. 28: India’s manufactur­ing sector activity fell to a fourmonth low in February as factory output and new business orders rose at a slower pace, says a monthly survey.

The Nikkei India Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) fell to 52.1 in February from 52.4 in January, indicating a modest improvemen­t in operating conditions.

This is for the seventh consecutiv­e month that the index remained above the 50-point-mark, that separates expansion from contractio­n.

According to Japanese financial services major Nomura, India's manufactur­ing PMI remained in the expansion zone but suggested some consolidat­ion after the rapid ramp up of activity in December.

In December 2017, the index had touched a 60month high of 54.7.

“It was promising to see that India's manufactur­ing sector remained in growth territory, as the impact of July’s Goods and Services Tax continues to dissipate,” said Aashna Dodhia, economist at IHS Markit and author of the report.

In response to greater production requiremen­ts, firms raised their staffing levels during February. Although modest, the pace of job-creation was slightly faster than January.

On the prices front, the survey said that cost inflation accelerate­d to the sharpest since February 2017, adding to expectatio­ns that inflationa­ry risks will continue over the coming months.

IHS Markit upgraded its CPI forecast to 5.2 per cent for financial year 2017-2018 amid a stronger oil price forecast and growing fiscal risks. The survey further noted that Indian manufactur­ers remained optimistic towards the 12-month outlook for output during February.

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