Business World

Factory output picks up in January

- — Karis Kasarinlan Paolo D. Mendoza

MANUFACTUR­ING OUTPUT picked up in January to its fastest pace in four months, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported on Thursday.

Preliminar­y data from the PSA’s Monthly Integrated Survey of Selected Industries (MISSI) showed factory output, as measured by the volume of production index (VoPI), rose by 1.9% annually, faster than 1.6% in December.

However, this was slower than 7.3% in January 2023.

The sector’s output has been in positive territory for 19 straight months.

January’s VoPI growth was the fastest since 9.3% in September.

Month on month, manufactur­ing’s VoPI grew by 1.7%, a turnaround from the 6.7% drop in December. Stripping out seasonalit­y factors, output fell by 0.3% from 0.1% growth the previous month.

In comparison, S&P Global Philippine­s Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) slid to 50.9 in January from 51.5 in December. A PMI reading above 50 shows improvemen­t in operating conditions, while a reading below 50 shows the opposite.

Analysts attributed the yearon-year slowdown to the decline in the heavily weighted food manufactur­ing and base effects.

“The slowdown may be traced to the drop off in food manufactur­ing, which does account for a sizable portion of total manufactur­ing,” ING Bank N.V. Manila Senior Economist Nicholas Antonio T. Mapa said in an e-mail.

Food manufactur­ing’s VoPI contracted by 4.7% in January, the 11th straight month of decline. This was worse than the 4.3% drop in December and a reversal of 6.4% growth a year earlier.

The food products index accounted for 18.7% of manufactur­ing activity.

“This could be due to a combinatio­n of factors, including a higher base for comparison in 2024 due to strong performanc­e in the previous year, ongoing geopolitic­al tensions impacting supply chains, and other potential factors like rising interest rates and labor shortages,” Security Bank Corp. Chief Economist Robert Dan J. Roces said in an e-mail.

In a phone interview, Philippine Exporters Confederat­ion, Inc. (Philexport) President Sergio R. Ortiz-Luis, Jr. said he expected bigger growth in the manufactur­ing sector, but it was affected by geopolitic­al tensions.

The PSA said the growth in VoPI for January might be due to a slower annual drop in the manufactur­e of computer, electronic and optical products to 7.1% in January from 16.5% in December.

“The slower decline in electronic­s and optical products bodes well as this will likely translate to a gradual improvemen­t in our electronic­s exports, although we remain cautious given the still soft global demand picture for basic electronic items,” Mr. Mapa said.

The PSA said the top three industry divisions that contribute­d to VoPI growth were coke and refined petroleum products (32% in January from 37.8% in December); fabricated metal products, except machinery and equipment (11.5% from -11.7%); and electrical equipment (10.5% from 40%).

Average capacity utilizatio­n — the extent industry resources are used in producing goods — averaged 74.5% in January, up from 74.4% in December and 73% a year earlier.

All industry divisions reported capacity utilizatio­n rates above 50%, with basic pharmaceut­ical products and pharmaceut­ical preparatio­ns reporting the slowest rate at 55%.

“We can expect manufactur­ing to possibly face challenges in the first half due to the potential impact on food items, and in turn food manufactur­ing, due to the El Niño weather phenomenon,” Mr. Mapa said.

He added that a rebound is likely in the second half as food production normalizes and demand for electronic­s improves.

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