The Sun (Malaysia)

Asian factories shake off supply chain woes

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TOKYO: Asian factory activity grew in November as crippling supply bottleneck­s eased, but rising input costs and renewed weakness in China dampened the region’s prospects for an early, sustained recovery from pandemic paralysis.

The newly detected Omicron coronaviru­s variant has also emerged as a fresh worry for the region’s policymake­rs, who are already grappling with the challenge of steering their economies out of the doldrums while trying to tame inflation amid rising commodity costs and parts shortages.

China’s factory activity fell back into contractio­n in November, the private Caixin/Markit Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) showed yesterday, as soft demand and elevated prices hurt manufactur­ers.

The findings from the private-sector survey, which focuses more on small firms in coastal regions, stood in contrast with those in China’s official PMI on Tuesday that showed manufactur­ing activity unexpected­ly rose in November, albeit at a very modest pace.

“Relaxing constraint­s on the supply side, especially the easing of the power crunch, quickened the pace of production recovery,” said Wang Zhe, senior economist at Caixin Insight Group, in a statement accompanyi­ng the data release. “But demand was relatively weak, suppressed by the Covid-19 epidemic and rising product prices.”

Beyond China, however, factory activity seemed to be on the mend with PMIs showing expansion in countries ranging from Japan, South Korea, India, Vietnam and the Philippine­s.

Japan’s PMI rose to 54.5 in November, up from 53.2 in October, the fastest pace of expansion in nearly four years.

South Korea’s PMI edged up to 50.9 from 50.2 in October, holding above the 50-mark threshold that indicates expansion in activity for a 14th straight month. But output shrank in South Korea for a second straight month as Asia’s fourth-largest economy struggles to fully regain momentum in the face of persistent supply chain disruption­s.

India’s manufactur­ing activity grew at the fastest pace in 10 months in November, buoyed by a strong pick-up in demand.

Vietnam’s PMI rose to 52.2 in November from 52.1 in October, while that of the

Philippine­s increased to 51.7 from 51.0.

Taiwan’s manufactur­ing activity continued to expand in November but at a slower pace, with the index hitting 54.9 compared with 55.2 in October. The picture was similar for Indonesia, which saw PMI ease to 53.9 from 57.2 in October.

The November surveys likely did not reflect the spread of the Omicron variant that could add further pressure on pandemicdi­srupted supply chains, with many countries imposing fresh border controls to seal themselves off. – Reuters

 ?? AFPPIX ?? A production line of solar photovolta­ic modules at a factory in Hai’an, Jiangsu province, China. A private-sector survey showed that China’s factory activity contracted in November. –
AFPPIX A production line of solar photovolta­ic modules at a factory in Hai’an, Jiangsu province, China. A private-sector survey showed that China’s factory activity contracted in November. –

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