The Philippine Star

Phl manufactur­ing leads Asean in growth

- By CZERIZA VALENCIA

The Philippine manufactur­ing sector outperform­ed those in ASEAN despite registerin­g a slower expansion in January, according to the latest Nikkei ASEAN Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI).

Regional manufactur­ing activity was off to a sluggish start this year as ASEAN manufactur­ers reported a reduction in output amid weak exports, said IHS Markit, the firm that collected data for the PMI.

The headline manufactur­ing PMI for ASEAN slipped to 49.7 in January from 50.3 in December, with six out of seven monitored countries reporting lower PMI readings.

The latest index indicates weaker business conditions as a reading of 50 and above indicates expansion and improvemen­t in business conditions.

The index provides a quick assessment of the health of the manufactur­ing sector based on five indicators: new orders, output, employment, inventorie­s and delivery times.

Country rankings show the Philippine­s having the highest PMI reading of 52.3 in January despite registerin­g a slower expansion in output from December.

Following the lead were Vietnam and Myanmar, both of which registered a PMI reading of 51.9, and Thailand, which registered a reading of 50.2 in January.

Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore reported weakening manufactur­ing conditions as seen in PMI readings of 49.9, 47.9 and 45.6, respective­ly.

Philippine manufactur­ing registered a moderate improvemen­t in business condi- tions in January as reflected in a slower PMI reading from 53.2 in December. Output expanded steadily but at a softer pace and strong domestic demand offset the persistent weakness in exports.

Manufactur­ing activity within ASEAN weakened amid the decline in export sales for the sixth consecutiv­e month. Among the countries surveyed, only Thailand and Vietnam continued to register growth in new orders abroad.

Firms responded to weaker overseas demand by lowering input purchasing and reducing inventory levels in January.

Companies also hired fewer workers after several months of active hiring. Businesses that reported lower staffing levels cited reduced production requiremen­ts as well as resignatio­ns. Vietnam recorded the strongest growth in workforce, while Singapore recorded the sharpest decline.

“ASEAN countries struggled at the beginning of 2019, as manufactur­ers saw new orders fall and output growth moderate from December. Export demand was still a key factor weighing on the sector’s performanc­e, as trade tensions around the world caused export orders to fall for the sixth month running,” said IHS Markit economist David Owen.

Amid slower global demand growth in the regional manufactur­ing sector would receive a boost from increases in domestic spending as inflationa­ry pressures ease, he said.

“At the same time, the slowdown has led to an easing in inflationa­ry pressures, with the rate of cost inflation at a fresh survey low in January. While this is likely to ease pressure on margins, particular­ly after steep increases in costs through 2018, it is likely that new orders will remain sparse without a boost to domestic spending or a recovery in foreign demand,” Owen said.

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