Hindustan Times (East UP)

Factory output rebounds to 3- month high

The manufactur­ing PMI rose from 48.1 in June to 55.3 in July on the back of eased curbs across states

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The country’s manufactur­ing sector activities witnessed the strongest rate of growth in three months in July amid improved demand conditions and easing of some local Covid-19 restrictio­ns, a monthly survey said on Monday.

The seasonally adjusted IHS Markit India Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) rose from 48.1 in June to 55.3 in July, pointing to the strongest rate of growth in three months.

In PMI parlance, a print above 50 means expansion while a score below 50 denotes contractio­n.

“It’s encouragin­g to see the Indian manufactur­ing industry recover from the blip seen in June. Output rose at a robust pace, with over one-third of companies noting a monthly expansion in production, amid a rebound in new business and the easing of some local Covid-19 restrictio­ns,” said Pollyanna De Lima, economics associate director at IHS Markit.

Lima further noted that “should the pandemic continue to recede, we expect a 9.7% annual increase in industrial production for 2021.”

On the recruitmen­t front, there was a marginal increase in employment in July that ended a 15-month sequence of job shedding.

“Although marginal, the rise in employment was the first since the onset of Covid-19. With firms’ cost burdens continuing to rise, however, and signs of spare capacity still evident, it’s too early to say that such a trend will be sustained in coming months,” Lima said.

On the inflation front, there was a softer but still sharp increase in input costs. Output charges rose only slightly, however, as several companies absorbed additional cost burdens amid efforts to boost sales.

“Policymake­rs will welcome evidence that inflationa­ry pressures are starting to abate. Firms signalled the slowest increases in input costs and output charges for seven months.

“Hence, we expect the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to keep interest rates unchanged in its August meeting as it continues to support growth,” Lima said.

The RBI is scheduled to announce its bi-monthly monetary policy review on August 6 at the end of the three-day meeting—August 4-6—of its Monetary Policy Committee (MPC).

Experts believe, amid fears of a third wave of coronaviru­s pandemic and hardening of retail inflation, the Reserve Bank is likely to maintain status quo on interest rate and watch the developing macroecono­mic situation for some more time before taking any decisive action on monetary policy.

The survey further noted that, Indian firms foresee output growth in the year ahead, with the end of the pandemic and rising sales expected to support the upturn.

“The overall level of positive sentiment rose from June’s 11-month low, but remained historical­ly subdued as some companies were concerned about the path of the pandemic,” the survey said.

Improving global demand helped bolster manufactur­ers’ order books with the firm noting that new export orders expanded markedly in July, following a moderate contractio­n in June.

Though sentiment improved marginally from June, producers remain concerned about the pandemic’s path and positive sentiment ‘remained historical­ly subdued’, the firm said.

Raw material scarcity remained a troubling spot for suppliers, leading to longer delivery times, but producers enhanced their stocking up of inputs significan­tly after a decline in June.

 ?? AP ?? Improving global demand helped bolster manufactur­ers’ order books.
AP Improving global demand helped bolster manufactur­ers’ order books.

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