The Philippine Star

Phl manufactur­ing sector 2nd best performing in Asean

- By CZERIZA VALENCIA

Despite a slower growth in April, the Philippine manufactur­ing sector remains the second best performing in the ASEAN region next to Vietnam, according to the Nikkei ASEAN Manufactur­ing purchasing managers’ index (PMI) released by IHS Markit yesterday.

The domestic factory sector registered a PMI reading of 53.3 percent in April next to Vietnam’s 54.1 percent. With the exception of Thailand, other Southeast Asian manufactur­ers – Myanmar, Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore – also registered solid to moderate increases in output during the month.

The Nikkei ASEAN Manufactur­ing PMI registered a reading of 51.1 in April, an improvemen­t from 50.9 in March. IHS Markit noted the rate of improvemen­t was the quickest in 33 months.

ASEAN manufactur­ers reported faster increases in both output and new orders during the reference period but remain burdened by inflationa­ry pressures.

IHS Markit said the domestic markets remain a key growth driver for ASEAN manufactur­ers but an upturn in foreign demand has been seen since September last year.

Despite the greater demand, manufactur­ers in the region are able to cope with increased demand as shown in falling work backlogs.

Input costs eased slightly in April but remained high, causing firms to raise the prices of their goods.

“Singapore reported a significan­t rise in input costs, where the pace of increase reached the quickest in almost three-and- a-half years. In comparison, a marginal rise was observed in Thailand,” IHS Markit said. “The ASEAN manufactur­ing sector started the second quarter on a stronger footing, building on the growth momentum seen in the first quarter. Growth was modest but neverthele­ss the strongest in nearly three years,” said IHS Markit economist Bernard Aw.

“The upturn remained largely broadbased, and underpinne­d by stronger increases in new orders and production. Notably, a revival of export order growth also contribute­d to the improvemen­t in the sector. Factories also stepped up purchasing activity,” Aw said.

He noted, however, that there are still challenges to sustaining the upturn among which is cost inflation pressure.

“On the price front, input cost inflation continued to increase at a quicker rate than firms’ selling prices, suggesting an ongoing squeeze on margins. This could weigh on future plans for hiring and investment, if the trend holds. Lastly, future expectatio­ns for manufactur­ing output continued to ebb, with substantia­l variations in the degree of business confidence observed across the region,” Aw said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines