The Sun (Malaysia)

GDP forecast upgraded to 5.1%

> MIDF Research revises Malaysia’s economic health on strong trade performanc­e

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PETALING JAYA: Owing to strong trade performanc­e, MIDF Research has revised upward Malaysia’s GDP and exports forecasts to 5.1% and 14.5% respective­ly for 2017, from 4.9% and 8.5% despite the manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) dropping to a record low.

While the manufactur­ing PMI went down below the 50-point level to 46.9 points, MIDF Research noted that business optimism has remained solid since May.

The fall in the PMI is mainly due to lower demand and output requiremen­t. However, new orders from abroad continue to rise for the second time in three months. Increases in new export orders also reflect firming global as well as regional demand on Malaysia’s goods.

Looking at other economies, MIDF Research said manufactur­ing PMI for major and emerging economies show positive signs as most of the PMI stays above the 50-point expansion line.

China’s Caixin Manufactur­ing recorded a PMI at 50.4 in June, the highest since March whereas Euro Area’s IHS Markit Manufactur­ing registered at 57.4, the fastest rate of expansion since April 2011.

As an export-reliance economy, MIDF Research said Malaysia will benefit from the improving global and regional demand via exports and investment.

“Therefore, we opine that Malaysia’s industrial production will remain growing at steady pace in June despite of the fall in manufactur­ing PMI during the month,” it added.

The research house said the strong trade performanc­e for the January-April period gives reasons to believe that the uptrend in global trade activity could sustain for the year. Malaysia’s exports have been recording a double-digit growth for five consecutiv­e months.

MIDF Research said the windfall from surging trade is a boon especially for exportsori­ented industries such as electrical and electronic­s, chemicals, petroleum products and palm oil.

“Hence, there will be a positive trickledow­n effect to domestic economic activities via output production, investment, employment, income and consumptio­n.”

Malaysia’s trade balance improved to RM8.75 billion, surpassing the first quarter average of RM6.3 billion, due to steady growth in exports, which expanded by 20.6% year-on-year (y-o-y) in April whereas imports grew by 24.7% y-o-y.

Despite the decelerati­on in month-onmonth growth, MIDF Research said April’s trade figures still indicate the upbeat momentum of Malaysia’s external sector, as well as sustained global demand.

Malaysia’s industrial production index is expected to grow 5.3% in 2017 as industrial production remains stable.

Meanwhile, MIDF Research foresees Malaysia’s inflation rate to moderate moving forward but uncertaint­y in global oil prices will have a substantia­l impact on the direction of broader price trends.

Headline inflation rose by 3.9% in May, the lowest in four months. The decline reflects the effects of cost-driven factors such as the tapering off of fuel price.

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