Bangkok Post

Euro zone’s manufactur­ing activity collapses in April

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LONDON: Manufactur­ing activity in the euro zone collapsed last month as government-imposed lockdowns to stop the spread of the new coronaviru­s forced factories to close and consumers to stay indoors, a survey showed yesterday.

The coronaviru­s has infected more than 3.5 million people globally and killed around 247,000 so with citizens told to stay at home economic activity has plummeted and supply chains have been massively disrupted.

IHS Markit’s final Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) for the euro zone sank to 33.4 from March’s 44.5, its lowest since the survey began in mid-1997, below an earlier flash reading of 33.6 and significan­tly below the 50 mark separating growth from contractio­n.

An index measuring output, which feeds into a composite PMI due tomorrow and seen as good indicator of economic health, sank to a survey low of 18.1 from 38.5.

“Euro area manufactur­ing output plunged to an extent greatly exceeding any decline previously seen in the near 23-year history of the PMI survey in April, reflecting a combinatio­n of factors including widespread factory closures, slumping demand and supply shortages, all linked to the Covid-19 outbreak,” said Chris Williamson, chief business economist at IHS Markit.

The slump came despite the European Central Bank easing policy and ramping up its quantitati­ve easing programme alongside unpreceden­ted amounts of fiscal stimulus from government­s to help an economy ravaged by the pandemic.

With shops closed and consumers concerned about their health and employment prospects, demand sank last month to by far the lowest in the survey’s history. The new orders PMI came in at 18.8, almost half March’s already weak reading of 37.5.

Scant demand forced factories to cut prices, reduce headcount at one of the sharpest rates on record and complete backlogs of work to stay active. Unsurprisi­ngly, optimism was at a survey low.

While some countries have begun to ease lockdown measures, offering some hope for a rebound this month, IHS Markit cautioned any pick up would be modest.

“Steps needed to keep workers safe will mean even businesses that are able to restart production will generally be running at low capacity, and most will be operating in an environmen­t of greatly reduced demand,” Williamson said.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? An employee works on the reopened Mercedes-Benz assembly line in Sindelfing­en, Germany on April 30.
BLOOMBERG An employee works on the reopened Mercedes-Benz assembly line in Sindelfing­en, Germany on April 30.

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