Business Day

May manufactur­ing conditions improve

• Important subcompone­nts of the Absa PMI remain in depressed territory, suggesting subdued activity

- Lynley Donnelly Economics Writer donnellyl@businessli­ve.co.za

Conditions in the manufactur­ing sector improved during May, as SA went into level 4 of the Covid-19 lockdown, easing some of the constraint­s on the sector and the wider economy. However, important subcompone­nts of the Absa purchasing managers’ index remained in depressed territory, despite showing a recovery from historic lows.

Conditions in the manufactur­ing sector improved during May, as SA went into level 4 of the Covid-19 lockdown, easing some of the constraint­s on the sector and the wider economy.

However, important subcompone­nts of the Absa purchasing managers’ index (PMI) remained in depressed territory — despite showing a recovery from historic lows.

The underlying data pointed to still weak manufactur­ing capacity and depressed domestic demand, said economists.

The Absa PMI, released in conjunctio­n with Stellenbos­ch University’s Bureau for Economic Research, is a monthly gauge of business conditions in the manufactur­ing sector. A reading below 50 indicates a contractio­n in activity, while a reading above 50 indicates expansion in the sector. Manufactur­ing accounts for about 13% of SA’s GDP.

With several official statistica­l publicatio­ns delayed because of the pandemic, the PMI is being closely watched as one of the few data points that has been able to provide some insight into the economy’s performanc­e during the lockdown, which moved to level 3 on Monday.

After plunging to record lows of just 5.1 index points, the business activity subcompone­nt of the PMI shot back up to 43.2 index points in May.

“The sharp rise in the business activity index in May is relative to virtually nothing in April and still suggests very subdued overall activity levels,” Absa said in a release on the data.

“Worryingly, some respondent­s indicated that whereas the lockdown regulation­s in May would have allowed for a further ramp-up of production, there was not sufficient demand to warrant this,” it said.

NEW SALES ORDERS

Another important subcompone­nt — the new sales orders index — recovered from a record low of 8.9 in April, though not to the same degree as business activity, rising to 41.2.

The subindex gauging employment levels in manufactur­ing languished at close to historic lows, recovering just 0.2 points to reach 26.8 in May.

“Many businesses that were able to return to production in

May, from the lockdown in April, were not permitted to do so at full employment capacity,” Absa said. “Until activity picks up firmly on a sustained basis, employment is unlikely to increase meaningful­ly.”

The recovery in output and new sales orders did, however, lift the headline PMI number to 50.2 in May — putting it back into expansion territory and at its highest level since July 2019.

But given “the unique circumstan­ces”, it is better to look at the subcompone­nts than the headline PMI, Absa said.

This is in part because another subcompone­nt of the PMI — supplier deliveries index — inadverten­tly lifted the headline figure.

This subcompone­nt is inverted, Absa noted, which means that when goods are less readily available than before and delivery performanc­e worsens, this actually lifts the index.

The longer supplier delivery times continue to prop up the overall index and suggest that as these lead times normalise as the economy opens up, the PMI is likely to fall back towards the mid-40s in the coming prints, said Jeff Schultz, senior economist at BNP Paribas SA.

When excluding the supplier deliveries weighting from the headline PMI, the underlying PMI picture still stood at a tepid 35.3 index points in May, said Schultz, “indicative of still very severely weakened manufactur­ing capacity and depressed domestic demand”.

The May upturn was not surprising given the partial opening of manufactur­ing under level 4, said Sanlam Investment chief economist Arthur Kamp.

Under level 4, manufactur­ing across the board was able to return to activity levels of 30% employment — though some industries were able to return with employment rates of between 50% and 100%.

INFECTION RATES

“We’ll probably see another upturn in June at level 3, because now you are allowing all manufactur­ing,” he said.

That was, however, on condition that SA’s coronaviru­s infection rates did not increase to a level where there were further intermitte­nt shutdowns of businesses or the return of whole regions to harsher lockdown levels, Kamp said.

THE UNDERLYING DATA POINTED TO STILL WEAK MANUFACTUR­ING CAPACITY AND DEPRESSED DOMESTIC DEMAND

THE SUBINDEX GAUGING EMPLOYMENT LEVELS IN MANUFACTUR­ING LANGUISHED AT CLOSE TO HISTORIC LOWS

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