Khaleej Times

Eurozone’s firms show some teeth

- Jonathan Cable Reuters Reuters

london — Eurozone private businesses ended the third quarter growing much more strongly than predicted, bolstered by manufactur­ers, according to a survey that showed the momentum should carry on into October.

That energy, alongside rising inflationa­ry pressures, is likely to increase expectatio­ns the European Central Bank will announce plans next month to reduce its monthly spending on quantitati­ve easing.

IHS Markit’s eurozone Flash Composite Purchasing Managers’ Index for September, seen as a good guide to economic growth, bounced to 56.7 from August’s 55.7, comfortabl­y above the 50 level that separates growth from contractio­n. September’s reading was above all forecasts in a Reuters poll, which had predicted a dip to 55.5. The euro gained 0.4 per cent to $1.1989, on track to end the week higher.

Earlier PMIs from Germany and France showed activity in the bloc’s two biggest economies also exceeded the top end of expectatio­ns in polls. “The eurozone PMI suggests that the economy remains very strong and will embolden policymake­rs at the ECB. Indeed, the price indices of the Composite PMI also picked up in September,” said Stephen Brown at Capital Economics.

The PMI pointed to third-quarter growth of 0.7 per cent, IHS Markit said, faster than the median forecast in a Reuters poll last week for 0.5 per cent.

The upturn came despite businesses increasing prices at one of the fastest rates this year. The output price index rose to 52.6 from 52.1. “This rounds out a run of data that provide evidence of building pipeline inflation pressures. This will help to build a case for ECB tapering next year,” said Bert Colijn at ING.

The ECB will announce in October a six-month extension to its asset purchase programme but will cut how much it buys each month to €40 billion from January, a Reuters poll of economists found last week. The PMI for manufactur­ing soared to 58.2 from 57.4, confoundin­g expectatio­ns for a fall to 57.1 and chalking up its highest reading since February 2011. An index measuring output rose to a 6-1/2-year high of 59.5 from 58.3.

Suggesting the solid pace would be maintained next month, factories built up a surplus of orders at the steepest rate in the sub-index’s 15-year history. The backlogs of work index was 57.8, compared with August’s 57.1.

“Firms are scrambling to expand capacity as fast as possible to meet order-book growth and rising backlogs is presenting them with huge problems,” said Chris Williamson, chief business economist at IHS Markit. —

 ?? AFP ?? hopes are high that the rapid pace of business in the eurozone will be sustained. —
AFP hopes are high that the rapid pace of business in the eurozone will be sustained. —

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