Cape Times

PMI levels remain stubbornly below the magic 50-point mark

- Kabelo Khumalo

THE ABSA/Bureau for Economic Research (BER) manufactur­ing PMI rose to its highest in five months in October, reaching 47.8 points from the 44.9 index points recorded in September.

The PMI, however, remained stuck below the neutral 50-point mark that separates contractio­n from growth for the fifth consecutiv­e month.

BER economist Lisette IJssel de Schepper yesterday said that the major subcompone­nts increased in October compared to the previous month. IJssel de Schepper said all but the suppliers’ performanc­e index stayed below the 50-point mark.

“The index tracking expected business conditions in six months’ time fell back to 51.2 points in October from 52.4 points in September. This suggests that purchasing managers still expect conditions to improve going forward,” IJssel de Schepper said.

The new sales orders index increased the most, surging to 49.9 points in October from 43.2 points in September.

The improvemen­t in demand supported an increase in output, with the business activity index rising 2.2 points to 45 points in October – the third straight increase.

In line with the up-tick in output, the employment index edged up to 44.3 points in October from the 44.1 points registered in the previous month.

However, the employment index remaining stuck below the 50-point mark for a sixth straight month.

The purchasing price index rose to 73.2 points in October – the highest level since June 2016. The purchasing commitment­s index rose to 48.1 points in October from 45.2 points in September – its highest since March 2017.

John Ashbourne, an Africa economist at Capital Economics, said that despite improvemen­ts in most of the sub-indices, they almost remained below the 50-point mark, suggesting widespread weakness.

“Encouragin­gly, the sub-sector measuring new orders jumped from 43.2 points in September to 49.9 points last month, suggesting that the decline in new business deals essentiall­y halted. This was, however, about as good as the news got,” Ashbourne said.

Macroecono­mics website Trading Economics said Manufactur­ing PMI in South Africa averaged 51.34 points from 1999 until 2017, reaching an all-time high of 64.20 points in July of 2006 and a record low of 34.20 points in April of 2009.

105 000 jobs shed On Tuesday, Statistics SA said the manufactur­ing, constructi­on and agricultur­e sectors shed 105 000 jobs in total in the third quarter of the year as South Africa unemployme­nt remained stubbornly steady at 27.7 percent. Manufactur­ing shed 50 000, the constructi­on sector lost 30 000 and agricultur­e cut 25 000.

Iraj Abedian, chief economist at Pan-African Investment, yesterday said that South Africa’s manufactur­ing sector’s share of the gross domestic product is still quite low relative to its emerging market economy peers.

“Local procuremen­t plays an important catalytic role in the promotion of the local manufactur­ing sector, and if done in the right manner, it could help bolster the struggling sector to contribute more towards the country’s growth, as well as contributi­ng socio-economical­ly,” Abedian said.

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