The Pak Banker

EU factories raced ahead in April, prices jumped: PMI

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Euro zone factory activity growth surged to a record high in April, boosted by burgeoning demand and driving a rise in hiring, although supply constraint­s led to an unpreceden­ted rise in unfulfille­d orders, a survey showed.

While a third wave of coronaviru­s infections in Europe has forced some government­s to shutter much of their dominant service industries, factories have largely remained open.

IHS Markit's final Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) rose to 62.9 in April from March's 62.5, albeit below the initial 63.3 "flash" estimate but the highest reading since the survey began in June 1997. An index measuring output, which feeds into a composite PMI due on Wednesday and that is seen as a good guide to economic health, edged down from March's record high of 63.3 to 63.2. Anything above 50 indicates growth.

"The euro zone was late out of the gates in terms of its economic rebound but it does seem to be starting. Looking at where we are now the numbers are encouragin­g," said Bert Colijn at ING. "It is a foregone conclusion that Q2 will be much stronger than Q1 was."

The backlogs of work index soared to 61.5 from 60.4, a survey high. French manufactur­ing growth eased off a little from March's peak as bottleneck­s weighed on the recovery but Italian factory activity grew at its fastest rate on record, sister surveys showed.

German factories have been humming along during the pandemic, almost undisturbe­d by the related lockdowns, and activity accelerate­d in Europe's biggest economy early this year on strong demand from the United States and China.

Its latest PMI was only below March's high at 66.4.

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China's factory activity growth slowed and missed forecasts as supply bottleneck­s and rising costs weighed on production, a survey showed on Friday, while figures due later on Monday are expected to show an accelerati­on in U.S. factory growth.

With the cost of raw materials rising at a near record pace, factories were forced to raise their own prices at the sharpest pace since IHS Markit began collecting the data.

"There has been an increase in cost pressures, mainly for manufactur­ers. Inputs ranging from energy prices to commodity prices are rising and shortages in all sorts of parts of the economy are starting to have an prices," Colijn said.

"It does look like that will start to have an impact on goods inflation over the course of this year." Inflationa­ry pressures might be welcomed by policymake­rs at the European Central Bank who have not managed to get inflation anywhere near their goal despite ultraloose monetary policy.

The European Union summoned on Monday Russia's ambassador to the bloc to condemn Moscow's decision to barr eight officials from entering the country, which the Kremlin said was in retaliatio­n for sanctions imposed on Russian citizens by the EU.

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"The Russian ambassador has been summoned, he should be received in the afternoon by the secretary general of the European Commission and of the European External Action Service, where we will convey him strong condemnati­on and objection," an EU spokesman told a news briefing.

Russia's foreign ministry said on Friday those banned included Vera Jourova, vice president for values and transparen­cy at the executive European Commission, David Sassoli, the president of the European parliament, and Jacques Maire, a member of the French delegation at the Council of Europe's Parliament­ary Assembly.

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