The Pak Banker

Pent-up demand driving global factory revival

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Demand for manufactur­ed goods drove extended growth in factories across Europe and Asia in February, but a slowdown in China underscore­d the challenges countries face as they seek a sustainabl­e recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic blow. Restrictio­ns imposed around the world to try and quell the spread of the coronaviru­s have shuttered vast swathes of the services industry, meaning it has fallen to manufactur­ers to support economies.

But vaccine rollouts and a pick-up in demand provided optimism for businesses that have grappled for months with a cash-flow crunch and falling profits.

IHS Markit's final Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) jumped to a three-year high of 57.9 in February from January's 54.8, beating the initial 57.7 "flash" estimate for one of the highest readings in the survey's 20-year history. German factory activity also reached a three-year peak last month and in France the pace of growth accelerate­d. Italy and Spain also saw a pick-up.

However, lockdown measures disrupted supply chains and factories struggled to obtain raw materials, leading to a big increase in delivery times. "Internatio­nal shipping delays and strong global demand for raw materials have slowed manufactur­ers worldwide," said Samuel Tombs at

Pantheon Macroecono­mics.

Factories in Britain, outside the euro zone and the European Union, reported the slowest output growth since May last month. Disruption­s and rising costs linked to Brexit and COVID-19 limited their ability to respond to a modest pick-up in orders. Manufactur­ing activity in Japan expanded at the fastest pace in over two years and South Korea's exports rose for a fourth straight month, suggesting Asia's export-reliant economies were benefiting from robust global trade.

On the flip side, China's factory activity grew at the slowest pace in nine months, hit by a domestic flareup of COVID-19 and soft demand from countries under renewed lockdown measures.

"In all, the softer pace of activity in today's (Chinese) manufactur­ing print is likely to be temporary, and we expect the growth momentum to pick back up on the back of a broadening out of the domestic demand recovery and a pick-up in global demand," said Erin Xin, an economist at HSBC.

"However, household consumptio­n, while recovering, has not yet fully reached pre-pandemic levels of growth due to continued labour market pressure."

China was the first major economy to lead the recovery from the COVID-19 shock, so any signs of prolonged cooling in Asia's growth engine will likely be a cause for concern.

With the global rebound still in its early days, analysts said the outlook was brightenin­g as companies increased output to restock inventory on hopes vaccine rollouts normalise economic activity.

"The recovery in durable-goods demand is continuing, which is creating a positive cycle for manufactur­ers in Asia," said Shigeto Nagai, head of Japan economics at Oxford Economics.

"As vaccine rollouts ease uncertaint­ies over the outlook, capital expenditur­e will gradually pick up. That will benefit Japan, which is strong in exports of capital goods," he said.

China's

Manufactur­ing PMI

Caixin/Markit fell to 50.9 in

February, the lowest level since last May but still above the 50 mark that separates growth from contractio­n. Activity elsewhere in Asia remained brisk.

The Japan PMI jumped to its highest since December 2018. In South Korea, a regional exports bellwether, shipments jumped 9.5% for a fourth straight month of increase.

India's factory activity expanded for the seventh consecutiv­e month on strong demand and increased output, though a spike in input costs could weigh on corporate profits ahead. The Philippine­s, Indonesia and Vietnam also saw manufactur­ing activity expand in February, a sign the region was recovering from the initial hit of the pandemic.

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