The Financial Express (Delhi Edition)

June factory growth at three-month high

Nikkei index rises to 51.7 in June amid a sharper increase in new orders

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MANUFACTUR­ING activity edged up to a three-month high in June, driven by stronger demand, but firms barely raised prices, a survey showed, leaving the door open for another rate cut by the RBI this year, reports Reuters. The Nikkei/ Markit Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) rose to 51.7 in June from May’s 50.7, its sixth month above the 50 mark that separates growth from contractio­n.

MANUFACTUR­ING in India registered a significan­t uptrend and hit a three-month high in June, backed by a stronger increase in new business orders, while subdued inflationa­ry pressure may prompt RBI to reduce key policy rate, a monthly survey said.

The Nikkei Markit India Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) — a composite indicator of manufactur­ing performanc­e — rose to 51.7 in June from 50.7 in May amid a sharper rise in new orders.

A reading above 50 denotes expansion while one below means contractio­n.

“Indian factories registered a welcome upturn in growth of both production and new orders mid-way through 2016, but producers clearly remain stuck in a low gear,” Pollyanna De Lima, economist at Markit and author of the report, said.

“The domestic market continues to be the main growth driver, as the Indian economic upturn provides a steady stream of new business... new foreign orders rose in June following a decline in May. However, it looks as if lacklustre global demand remains a headwind for Indian manufactur­ers.”

Lima added that “rates of expansion remain weak by historical standards, with the PMI average for April June being lower than that seen in the prior quarter”.

On the jobs front, however, sustained growth of output and orderbooks failed to push producers to hire more.

“In fact, it has been roughly three years since the sector has seen any meaningful job creation,” Lima said.

On prices, the report said purchasing cost inflation softened while selling prices remained broadly unchanged.

“This lack of inflationa­ry pressure provides RBI with further leeway to boost economic growth through cutting its benchmark rate,” Lima said.

In its policy review meet in June, RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan kept interest rates intact, citing rising inflationa­ry pressure, but hinted at a reduction later this year if good monsoon helps ease inflation.

The industry is still hopeful of further rate reduction from the apex bank to boost investment.

The Indian economy grew at 7.9% in the fourth quarter of 2015-16, taking the overall GDP growth to a five-year high of 7.6% in the fiscal. PTI

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 ??  ?? Indian factories registered a welcome upturn in growth of both production and new orders mid-way through 2016, but producers clearly remain stuck in a low gear, the report said
Indian factories registered a welcome upturn in growth of both production and new orders mid-way through 2016, but producers clearly remain stuck in a low gear, the report said

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