Business World

PHL factory growth slows but tops peers

- Elijah Joseph C. Tubayan

IMPROVEMEN­T of factory activity in the Philippine­s slowed at the start of this quarter as growth of output, new orders and exports weakened, even as the country bested Southeast Asian peers, according to the latest monthly survey which IHS Markit conducted for Nikkei, Inc.

The Nikkei Philippine­s Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) logged 52.8 in July, down from June’s 53.9.

“There were signs of softening demand in July,” the report read.

The manufactur­ing PMI consists of five sub-indices, with new orders having the biggest weight at 30%, followed by output (25%), employment (20%), supplier delivery times (15%) and stocks of purchases (10%). A reading above 50 suggests improvemen­t in business conditions, while a score below that signals deteriorat­ion.

Vietnam was the only other Southeast Asian economy that improved that month, with a 51.7 reading that was still slower than June’s 52.5. The rest registered erosion in business conditions: Thailand posted 49.6; Myanmar, 49.1; Indonesia, 48.6; Malaysia, 48.3 and Singapore, 47.9.

“The Philippine­s’ manufactur­ing economy lost some momentum at the start of the third quarter. While still solid, growth rates in both output and new orders were slower than June. That led to hiring and input stocks growing at a more gradual pace,” the report read.

IHS Markit economist Bernard Aw said the weakening of improvemen­t should be temporary given “elevated” business confidence.

“The Philippine­s manufactur­ing economy started the third quarter on a softer note, but the slowdown is likely to be shortlived,” Mr. Aw said in a report.

“PMI survey data showed that while growth in output and new orders remained solid, both slowed from June,” he noted.

“However, business optimism remained elevated, suggesting that companies expect the pullback in business activity to be transient.”

This time, the protracted battle for Marawi City between government forces and Islamic militants and martial law which President Rodrigo R. Duterte consequent­ly declared over all of Mindanao — extended by Congress till yearend — entered the picture to cast a pall over business sentiment.

“Anecdotal evidence suggested that marketing activity and new models underpinne­d the upturn, alongside higher demand for products such as electronic­s,” the report read.

“However, the martial law imposed on Mindanao had affected sales, according to surveyed firms.” —

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