Millennium Post

India’s manufactur­ing PMI declines to 51.8% in March

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NEW DELHI: The country’s manufactur­ing sector activity grew at the slowest rate in four months during March, hampered by softer rises in new business as internatio­nal demand faltered owing to the coronaviru­s pandemic, a monthly survey said on Thursday.

The headline seasonally adjusted IHS Markit India Manufactur­ing PMI fell to 51.8 in March, from 54.5 in February, signalling the slowest improvemen­t in business conditions since November 2019.

This is the 32nd consecutiv­e month that the manufactur­ing PMI has remained above the 50-point mark.

In PMI parlance, a print above 50 means expansion, while a score below that denotes contractio­n.

“The Indian manufactur­ing sector remained relatively sheltered from the negative impact of the global Coronaviru­s outbreak in March, however, there were pockets of disruption and a clear onset of fear amongst firms,” Eliot Kerr, Economist at IHS Markit, said.

Moreover, the confidence towards the business outlook plummeted to a record low, with positivity tapered by COVID-19 concerns, the survey said.

“Should the trajectory of injections continue in the same vein, the Indian manufactur­ing sector can expect a much sharper negative impact in the coming months, similar to the scale seen in other countries,” Kerr said.

According to the survey, the sentiment towards the 12-month business outlook

‘The Indian manufactur­ing sector remained relatively sheltered from the negative impact of the Coronaviru­s outbreak in March, however, there were pockets of disruption and a clear onset of fear amongst firms’

weakened in March. Some panelists said there are fears of prolonged shutdowns due to COVID-19 and the associated negative impact on demand.

Commenting on the latest India survey results, Kerr said new orders and output both grew at softer rates, but those readings were relatively tame compared to those seen at goods producers in Europe and other parts of Asia.

“The most prominent signs of trouble came from the new export orders and future activity indices, which respective­ly indicated tumbling global demand and softening domestic confidence,” Kerr noted.

New orders placed with Indian manufactur­ers rose at a slower pace in March, while, new export business fell sharply.

“In fact, the decline in internatio­nal sales was the fastest since September 2013 amid widespread lockdowns due to the COVID-19 pandemic,” the survey noted.

The number of deaths around the world linked to the new coronaviru­s has crossed 47,000.

In India, nearly 2,000 coronaviru­s cases have been reported so far.

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