Asian factories defy China slowdown as Euro area loses momentum
ASIA’S factories did a better job in the past month than their European counterparts of weathering the impact on global supply chains of China’s lockdowns and the conflict in Ukraine.
Manufacturing hub South Korea’s Purchasing Managers’ Index climbed to 52.1 in April, according to S&P Global, recovering some ground lost in March. The Philippines, Myanmar and Australia all advanced too, while only Taiwan proved an outlier. By contrast, the equivalent measure in the euro area was at a 15-month low.
“It will be important to see how growth momentum is sustained amid ongoing supply-chain disruption and sharply rising costs,” said Maryam Baluch, an economist at S&P Global. China remains a significant risk as the latest surge in Covid cases and subsequent lockdowns threaten to choke off manufacturing logistics and restrain trade.
In the euro area, a measure of factory activity was revised up slightly to 55.5 but still confirmed to be slowing as shortages of components were aggravated by the Chinese outbreak and the war in Ukraine. Rising prices and uncertainty about the economic outlook also weighed on demand in the currency bloc, with growth in new orders slowing sharply.
The region’s manufacturing sector “looks set for a difficult period of falling production and surging prices,” said S&P Global economist Chris Williamson.
Asia-pacific economies, which include some of the world’s top exporters, largely held up through April. The impact from weaker activity in China -- the top trading partner for much of the region -was offset by renewed demand in other key markets such as the US. The Philippines recorded its best performance since November 2017 as output and new orders surged. Only Taiwan fell—reflecting its deep economic links to China—with its lowest reading since July 2020.
In South Korea, meanwhile, price and supply pressures were exacerbated by Russia’s war on Ukraine and China’s expanding Covid restrictions.
The April PMI releases are scattered across several days given holidays across the region, including Eid al-fitr in Southeast Asia’s biggest economy, Indonesia. Thailand ’s PMI is set for release Tuesday, with Vietnam and Indonesia following on Wednesday and Malaysia’s due on Thursday.