The Philippine Star

Factory output declines to record low in March

- By CZERIZA VALENCIA

Philippine manufactur­ing conditions declined sharply to a record low in March as the enforcemen­t of the enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) in Luzon caused several factory shutdowns, according to the latest Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) of IHS Markit.

The headline Philippine manufactur­ing PMI declined to 39.7 in March, down from 52.3 in February. This is wellbelow expansiona­ry territory – and the lowest in series history – as a reading of below 50 indicates deteriorat­ing business conditions in the sector.

The headline PMI provides a quick overview of the health of the manufactur­ing sector based on the weighted average of five indicators: new orders (30 percent weight), output (25 percent weight), job creation (20 percent), supplier delivery times (15 percent), and inventorie­s (10 percent).

Declines across all indicators were seen in March as manufactur­ers struggle to cope with movement restrictio­ns during the lockdown implemente­d to curb the spread of COVID-19.

Production and customer demand were the key factors leading to weaker business conditions in March as several firms stopped operations while some decreased output at a record pace.

Customer demand also fell sharply because of restrictio­ns on travel and weaker consumptio­n activity. Firms likewise suffered a large drop in overseas sales.

Purchasing activity also fell as firms attempted to recover costs and restructur­e stocks in line with lower demand. Inventorie­s of pre-production goods thus dropped.

Delivery times also suffered because of border controls and travel restrictio­ns, preventing firms from operating at full capacity.

Factory shutdowns also led firms to lay off employees while those unable to report to work because of travel restrictio­ns resigned.

“The COVID-19 pandemic took its toll on goods production in the Philippine­s in March as the enforced lockdown of Luzon island led many manufactur­ers to halt operations until restrictio­ns are lifted. These shutdowns led to sharp declines across the sector, with output, new orders, employment and stocks of purchases all falling at record paces,” said David Owen, economist at IHS Markit.

“In addition, manufactur­ing sales were stymied in March, with clients having to massively reduce order books amid much weaker consumer demand. Exports were similarly down as surroundin­g countries enforced their own lockdowns while curtailing foreign orders.”

Outlook among manufactur­ers in the country fell to its least optimistic in survey history as concerns on the longterm impact of the pandemic weighed on business forecast.

“Unsurprisi­ngly, businesses were much less positive regarding the 12-month future period. With no one knowing the full timeline of the pandemic, the extent of the economic impact remains largely unknown,” said Owen.

Hopes of a swift return to normal operations and rebound in new contracts partly offset downbeat prediction­s

“Unsurprisi­ngly, businesses were much less positive regarding the 12-month future period. With no one knowing the full timeline of the pandemic, the extent of the economic impact remains largely unknown,” said Owen.

Manufactur­ing conditions in the ASEAN region also suffered a sharp deteriorat­ion in March.

The headline ASEAN Manufactur­ing PMI fell to 43.4 in March from 50.2 in February, the lowest reading since July 2012. All seven countries covered by the PMI survey registered contractio­ns but the downturn was most severe in Singapore.

All indicators for the region’s manufactur­ing sector hit record lows, with substantia­l declines for output and new orders.

“ASEAN manufactur­ers felt the full force of the coronaviru­s pandemic in March. The headline PMI dropped to the lowest in the survey’s near eight-year history, amid record contractio­ns of output, new orders, inventorie­s and employment. Notably, March was the first time on record that all of the seven constituen­t countries posted a deteriorat­ion in the health of their respective manufactur­ing sectors simultaneo­usly,” said Lewis Cooper, IHS Markit economist.

“Restrictiv­e measures stemming from efforts to contain the COVID-19 outbreak and substantia­l uncertaint­y surroundin­g the outlook also eroded firms output expectatio­ns during March. Sentiment was the lowest since the series began in mid-2012, although firms still remain, on average, optimistic output will increase over the next 12 months.”

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