The Philippine Star

Mfg extends recovery in April

- By CZERIZA VALENCIA

Local factories continued to churn out better performanc­e in April, aided by faster increases in new orders, output and employment, a manufactur­ing survey showed.

Based on the latest results of the Nikkei Philippine­s Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ index, the domestic manufactur­ing sector extended its recovery in April as the headline PMI rose to a year-high 52.7, from 51.5 in March and 50.8 in February.

The headline PMI is a composite index based on five key indicators: new orders, output, employment, suppliers’ delivery times and inventorie­s of inputs. It is designed to provide a quick snapshot of the performanc­e of the manufactur­ing sector each month.

The report said the recent upturn in domestic manufactur­ing was caused by strengthen­ing demand at the start of the second quarter. Order booking accelerate­d to a four-month high and demand was met by faster expansion of output as goods producers hired more workers and purchased more inputs.

Inflationa­ry pressures, however, remain a concern as “supply chains came under pressure,” said IHS Markit, the firm that collected data for the PMI.

Due to higher prices of fuel, industrial metal, sugar and paper, average cost burdens rose. This was aggravated by the weaker foreign exchange rate.

Firms thus implemente­d another round of price hikes to pass on the higher costs to customers.

“The pace of charge inflation was the second-fastest in the survey history,” said IHS Markit.

Purchasing managers surveyed, however, remain confident of output growth in the next 12 months on the back of the solid economic climate, new product designs and planned business expansions.

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