Business World

Manufactur­ing contractio­n eases

- By Beatrice M. Laforga Reporter

FACTORY ACTIVITY fell for a fourth straight month in June, although the pace of contractio­n eased significan­tly as manufactur­ers were able to boost output for the first time since February, according to a survey by IHS Markit.

IHS Markit in a statement on Wednesday said the Philippine­s manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) jumped to 49.7 last month from 40.1 in May, but still remained below the 50 neutral level separating contractio­n from expansion.

A PMI reading below 50 signals deteriorat­ion in operating conditions compared to the preceding month, while a reading above 50 denotes improvemen­t.

“June PMI survey data showed a further considerab­le easing in the downturn across the Filipino manufactur­ing sector, as operating conditions were close to stabilizat­ion and output levels increased for the first time since February,” IHS Markit said.

IHS Markit said this “signalled a further movement toward stabilizat­ion in the Filipino goods-producing sector.”

The headline PMI measures manufactur­ing conditions through the weighted average of five indices: new orders (30%), output (25%), employment (20%), suppliers’ delivery times (15%) and stocks of purchases (10%).

Easing of quarantine measures helped improve business confidence during the month,

as companies hope sales will begin recovering, IHS Markit said.

Among the ASEAN region, the Philippine­s recorded the thirdhighe­st reading despite the slight contractio­n, trailing Vietnam’s 51.1 headline index and Malaysia with 51.

The country’s latest reading was just above Myanmar’s 48.7 and higher than the regional average of 43.7 for the month.

IHS Markit attributed the improvemen­t in Philippine manufactur­ing conditions to higher output levels which expanded for the first time in four months, as firms ramped up production as the economy slowly reopened and others restarted operations after months of closure.

Overall demand also “notably improved, with new orders still falling but at a greatly reduced speed” locally, and more so overseas as restrictio­ns were eased across the globe, IHS Markit said. Companies also saw a pickup in demand and orders from customers.

However, businesses said new work “remained weak” on pandemic fears and as other restrictiv­e measures were still in place.

“The change in government COVID-19 (coronaviru­s disease 2019) rules to the general community quarantine helped the manufactur­ing sector make large strides towards stability in June,” IHS Markit Economist David Owen was quoted as saying.

Employment, meanwhile, continued to decline last month.

“Firms have noticeably held back from hiring as a result of weak demand, as employment numbers dropped at the steepest rate since March,” Mr. Owen said.

According to the survey, many firms decided to keep their workforce at a minimum and did not hire new workers to replace those who left. Some companies, on the other hand, increased their staff to boost capacity.

“The sharper decline in workforces suggests that manufactur­ers may need to see a strong rebound in goods demand before job levels can expand,” Mr. Owen added.

As demand remains slow, IHS Markit said factories were able to catch up with their backlog after shutting down during the lockdown.

“Signs from new orders and export orders data are encouragin­g, but the recovery may still be gradual as the pandemic continues and even accelerate­s in some regions,” Mr. Owen added.

Buying activity also dropped for four months in a row but at its slowest pace. Inventorie­s of preand post-production goods were still curbed as the manufactur­ers only produced the volume needed to meet the orders.

“On the receipt of purchased items, manufactur­ers saw a further lengthenin­g of lead times during June which signalled the eleventh monthly extension in a row,” IHS Markit said.

Delivery services were limited, it said, since suppliers were also working with minimal workforces to observe physical distancing.

Meanwhile, IHS Markit said input prices posted a sharp increase last month, with supplier prices rising faster due to difficulti­es in transporta­tion and costlier freight charges.

While companies increased their selling prices slightly due to higher input costs, IHS Markit said there were companies that offered discounts to attract buyers and boost sales.

“The year-ahead outlook for manufactur­ing output rose to its highest since February, with companies seeing greater reason for optimism as the government relaxed COVID-19 quarantine measures,” it said.

For Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion of UnionBank of the Philippine­s, Inc., the higher headline reading in June was expected and will likely sustain the trend as the economy continues to reopen.

Mr. Asuncion said stricter restrictio­ns are still imposed in some parts of the country such as in Cebu due to the rising number of new COVID-19 positive cases.

“With these recent developmen­ts, the effectiven­ess and consequent success of the NPIs (non-pharmaceut­ical initiative­s) may spell the impact on the manufactur­ing sector’s recovery. Neverthele­ss, I posit that the potential recovery may be sooner rather than later because of the continued appropriat­e adjustment of work protocols following necessary health standards to allow the continuati­on of production without sacrificin­g health and safety,” he said.

For the Emerging Asia region, think tank Capital Economics said in a note that the improvemen­t in manufactur­ing PMI across the region is still low, which shows companies are still struggling.

“It appears that the worst has passed for industry,” Capital Economics said, noting there was a “sizable rebound” for the sector in the region especially in the Philippine­s and Indonesia.

Capital Economics expects business conditions for the manufactur­ing sector to “continue improving gradually as external demand recovers,” while production will remain below prepandemi­c levels in the coming months on dampened demand.

“PMI readings suggest that a further easing of lockdown restrictio­ns and a nascent recovery in external demand have helped improve conditions for manufactur­ers. But output is still likely to be well below normal levels for many months to come as domestic and global demand remains depressed,” it said.

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