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Manufactur­ing sector activity inches up from 2-year low

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NEW DELHI: The country’s manufactur­ing sector activity inched up in November, but the upturn remained subdued as growth rates for new orders as well as production were modest, a monthly survey said on Monday.

The IHS Markit India Manufactur­ing PMI rose to 51.2 in November from 50.6 in October, when it had fallen to a two-year low, indicating only a slight improvemen­t in the health of the sector. Although business conditions in the Indian manufactur­ing sector improved in November, the rise, however, remained subdued compared to earlier this year and the survey history, the study said. This is the 28th consecutiv­e month that the manufactur­ing PMI has remained above the 50-point mark. In PMI parlance, a print above 50 means expansion, while a score below that denotes contractio­n.

“After pulling back noticeably in October, manufactur­ing sector growth displayed a welcoming accelerati­on in November. Still, rates of expansion in factory orders, production and exports remained far away from those recorded at the start of 2019, with subdued underlying demand largely blamed for this,” said Pollyanna de Lima,

Principal Economist at IHS Markit.

According to the survey, growth of manufactur­ing activity in November was supported by the launch of new products and better demand, though restrained by competitiv­e pressures and unstable market conditions. “Some level of uncertaint­y regarding the economy was evident by a subdued degree of business optimism. Also, companies shed jobs for the first time in over a year-and a-half and there was another round of reduction in input buying,” Lima said.

Lima further noted that the weakness of these forward-looking indicators suggest that firms are bracing themselves for challengin­g times ahead. On the inflation front, there were only marginal increases in both input costs and output charges in November.

“PMI data continued to show a lack of inflationa­ry pressures in the sector which, combined with slow economic growth, suggests that the RBI will likely extend its accommodat­ive policy stance and further reduce the benchmark interest rate during December,” Lima said.

Rate cut likely

RBI may cut interest rates for the sixth straight time on December 5 to support growth that has continued to slip to more than six-year low on slump in manufactur­ing, bankers and experts said.

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