Philippine Daily Inquirer

MANUFACTUR­ING SECTOR POSTS STRONGGROW­TH

Amajor driver of higher output has been solid domestic demand

- By Ben O. de Vera @bendeveraI­NQ

Manufactur­ing in November picked up to its fastest pace so far this year on the back of strong domestic demand that boosted both production and new orders, the latest Nikkei Philippine­s Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) showed.

In a report Friday, global research firm IHS Markit said the PMI increased to 54.8 last month from October’s 53.7, the highest reading thus far in 2017.

A PMI score of above 50 in- dicates an overall increase in manufactur­ing activity.

“The Philippine­s’ manufactur­ing economy is on course to end the year with its strongest quarter for 2017, with business conditions improving further during November. Furthermor­e, there are signs in the latest survey sub-indices to suggest the upturn will gather pace in December,” IHS Markit principal economist Bernard Aw said in a statement.

“A major driver of higher output has been solid domestic demand. The PMI’s gauge of new order volumes showed the recent expansion in sales accelerati­ng in November, resulting in the largest monthly increase so far this year. Further rises in purchasing activity and inventorie­s also point to the current expansion continuing and possibly accelerati­ng in December,” Awadded.

IHS Markit said anecdotal evidence suggested that strong economic conditions, promotiona­l activity and greater client demand continued to sustain order book growth.

“While higher foreign demand contribute­d to overall new orders, the domestic market re- mained a key driver as growth in new export orders was well below that of total new business inflows,” according to IHS Markit.

In November, more companies hired additional employees for the second straight month to keep up with the ramped up production in order to meet their orders, IHS Markit said.

Also, higher sales led firms to build up inventorie­s further, with suppliers coming under pressure to fulfill demand for manufactur­ing inputs, IHS Markit added, citing that the increase in buying levels was the biggest since De- cember last year.

“The PMI suggests the strong growth momentum in the Filipino economy has some way to go. However, robust economic activity has been marred by rising inflationa­ry pressures, commonly associated with a weak exchange rate. As such, higher prices remain an area of concern that policymake­rs need to watch closely. A further rise in global raw material costs, combined with a weak peso, will generate an unwelcome tightening of businesses’ profit margins,” according to Aw.

The Philippine­s’ manufactur­ing economy is on course to end the year with its strongest quarter for 2017 Bernard Aw IHS Markit principal economist

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