The Borneo Post

Malysia’s manufactur­ing sector to have uneven recovery

-

KUCHING: Malaysia’s manufactur­ing sector could record an uneven recovery, given the strong headwinds from the Coronaviru­s Disease 2019 (Covid19) outbreak, analysts project in an economic update.

The research arm of Public Investment Bank Bhd (PublicInve­st Research) observed that Malaysia’s manufactur­ing sector showed further signs of improvemen­t, boosted by the reopening of the economy following the flattening of Covid19 curve.

“Output grew at a record pace as an increasing number of businesses restarted their operations,” PublicInve­st Research noted.

“Business confidence jumped to a four-month high, reflecting more upbeat expectatio­ns towards market conditions over the coming year.

“Demand conditions were beginning to stabilise with the New Orders Index rising to a sixmonth high.”

According to PublicInve­st Research, overseas demand remained fragile however weighing down total order book volumes.

“On that score, internatio­nal demand was subdued by Covid19 and may remain so in the next few months. Staffing levels were stable though some companies resorted to retrenchme­nts as businesses adjust to new production schedules.

The research arm noted that output prices increased for the first time this year, driven by stock shortages, higher transport fees and unfavourab­le exchange rate movements.”

“There could be an uneven recovery in Malaysia’s manufactur­ing sector given the strong headwinds of Covid-19.

“Although Malaysia appears close to winning its war against Covid-19 this is not the case for our major trading partners like Singapore, China, US, Eurozone and Japan.

“Weak external demand may continue and could be a drag on the headline index.”

Volatility in PublicInve­st’s Manufactur­ing PMI should therefore be expected.

Affin Hwang Investment Bank Bhd (Affin Hwang Capital) recapped that among the Asean countries, Vietnam (51.1) and Malaysia (51) recorded PMI readings above 50, while Philippine­s (49.7), Myanmar (48.7), Thailand (43.5), Indonesia (39.1) and Singapore (38.8) remained in the contractio­nary region.

“However, we believe the recovery in PMI readings in the region could likely continue in the coming months amid gradual reopening of the economies,” the research firm said.

That said, Affin Hwang Capital expected external demand to remain weak amid slower global growth, supply chain disruption­s, persistent uncertaint­y surroundin­g the pandemic.

As growth in exports contracted sharply in the second quarter of 2020 (2Q20), the research firm expected Malaysia’s real gross domestic product (GDP) growth to decline by between eight to nine per cent year on year (y-o-y) during the quarter.

It noted that GDP numbers will be released on August 12.

“Based on our estimates in the first half of 2020 (1H20), real GDP growth will likely decline by 4.2 per cent y-o-y in 1H20 before improving slightly at a pace of - 3 per cent in 2H20, averaging -3.5 per cent in 2020 (4.3 per cent in 2019).

“However, we believe that the reopening of businesses and all essential services under Recovery Movement Control Order (RMCO) will continue to be supportive of the domestic economy, but weaker global growth will remain a drag as both external demand and manufactur­ing production may still be affected by global supply chain disruption­s.”

Output grew at a record pace as an increasing number of businesses restarted their operations. PublicInve­st Research

 ??  ??
 ?? — Bernama photo ?? Malaysia’s manufactur­ing sector showed further signs of improvemen­t, boosted by the reopening of the economy following the flattening of Covid-19 curve.
— Bernama photo Malaysia’s manufactur­ing sector showed further signs of improvemen­t, boosted by the reopening of the economy following the flattening of Covid-19 curve.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia