Deccan Chronicle

Factory growth rises to 8-yr-high

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New Delhi: The country's manufactur­ing sector activity climbed to a near eightyear high in January, driven by sharp rise in new business orders amid a rebound in demand conditions that led to rise in production and hiring activity, a private monthly survey said on Monday. Following a sharp rise in demand, January saw growth of new business.

Bengaluru, Feb. 3: India’s manufactur­ing activity expanded at its quickest pace in nearly eight years in January with robust growth in new orders and output, a private survey showed on Monday, suggesting the economy may be getting back on firmer footing.

In response to the jump in sales, factories hired new workers at the fastest rate in more than seven years.

If sustained, the improvemen­t in business conditions could point to a gradual economic recovery in coming months, as forecast by analysts in a Reuters poll last month, after growth slowed to a more than six-year low in the JulySeptem­ber quarter.

The Nikkei Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index, compiled by IHS Markit, jumped to 55.3 last month from 52.7 in December. It was the highest reading since February 2012 and above the 50-mark separating growth from contractio­n for the 30th straight month.

“The PMI results show that a notable rebound in demand boosted growth of sales, input buying, production and employment as firms focused on rebuilding their inventorie­s and expanding their capacities in anticipati­on of further increases in new business,” Pollyanna De Lima, principal economist at IHS Markit, said in a news release.

A new orders sub-index that tracks overall demand hit its highest level since December 2014 and output grew at its fastest pace in over seven and a half years, pushing manufactur­ers to hire at the strongest rate since August 2012.

Meanwhile, both input costs and output prices rose at a slower pace, indicating overall inflation may have eased after hitting a more than five year high of 7.35 per cent in December, although probably not below the Reserve Bank of India’s medium-term target of 4 per cent.

That might keep the central bank on the sidelines over the coming months.

“To complete the good news, there was also an uptick in business confidence as survey participan­ts expect buoyant demand, new client wins, advertisin­g and product diversific­ation to boost output in the year ahead,” added De Lima.

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