Global factories struggle for momentum amid patchy demand
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[June 01, 2023] By
Jonathan Cable and Leika Kihara
LONDON/TOKYO (Reuters) -Sluggish global demand deepened the decline in
manufacturing activity across Europe and remained a major challenge for
many of Asia's big exporters, business surveys for May showed on
Thursday.
Purchasing managers' indexes (PMIs) for the euro zone moved further
below breakeven despite factories cutting prices for the first time
since September 2020. In Britain, output fell for a third month in a row
and new orders declined at the fastest pace in four.
And while PMIs from China and Japan showed swings in factory activity to
growth last month, they stood in contrast to weak indicators from South
Korea, Vietnam and Taiwan, where declines continued.
Compiled by S&P Global, Thursday's HCOB final manufacturing PMI for the
euro zone fell to 44.8 from April's 45.8, just ahead of a preliminary
reading of 44.6 but below the 50 mark separating growth from contraction
for an 11th consecutive month.
An index measuring output, which feeds into a composite PMI due on
Monday that is seen as a good guide to economic health, dropped to a
six-month low of 46.4 from 48.5.
"The weakness in demand in the manufacturing sector, which has become
increasingly evident since the beginning of the year in falling PMI
readings, has now led the surveyed companies to reduce their production
for the second month in a row," said Cyrus de la Rubia, chief economist
at Hamburg Commercial Bank.
"The decline in new orders from home and abroad signals that the
weakness in output is likely to persist for several more months."
The decline was broad based with activity falling in the currency
union's four biggest economies - Germany, France, Italy and Spain.
Factories cutting prices as the costs of production dropped at the
fastest pace since February 2016 failed to stem a fall in demand.
That price drop will likely be welcomed by policymakers at the European
Central Bank who have failed so far to get inflation back to target
despite embarking on their most aggressive policy-tightening programme
in the Bank's history.
Inflation was 6.1% last month, over three times the ECB's goal, official
data showed on Thursday.
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A worker wearing a face mask works on a
production line manufacturing bicycle steel rim at a factory, as the
country is hit by the novel coronavirus outbreak, in Hangzhou,
Zhejiang province, China March 2, 2020. China Daily via REUTERS
ASIA DIVERGES
The patchy set of Asian PMIs pointed to an uneven recovery from the
pandemic, particularly in China, and clouds the outlook for growth
in the region.
"The PMI surveys suggest that China's economic recovery was still
ongoing in May, albeit at a slower pace. Waning fiscal support
weighed on construction activity," said Julian Evans-Pritchard,
analyst at Capital Economics.
"But manufacturing output ticked up and the service sector is still
seeing decent gains, suggesting that Q2 GDP growth may not be as bad
as many fear."
China's Caixin/S&P Global manufacturing PMI rose to 50.9 in May from
49.5 in April.
The reading surpassed expectations of 49.5 in a Reuters poll, a
stark contrast to a deeper contraction in activity seen in the
official PMI released on Wednesday.
But China's business confidence for the coming 12 months fell to a
seven-month low amid concerns over global economic prospects, the
Caixin survey showed.
Japan's final au Jibun Bank PMI rose to 50.6 in May, its first
reading above the 50.0 threshold since October, as the economy's
delayed re-opening from pandemic curbs lifted demand.
However, separate data released on Wednesday showed Japanese factory
output unexpectedly fell in April.
Elsewhere in Asia, South Korea's PMI stood at 48.4 in May, slumping
into its longest spell of contractionary readings in 14 years, as
slowing global demand hit output and orders.
Vietnam, Malaysia and Taiwan also saw factory activity shrink in
May, while that of the Philippines expanded, the surveys showed.
India's factory activity expanded at the quickest pace since October
2020, a sign strong demand and output were supporting Asia's
third-largest economy.
(Reporting by Jonathan Cable and Leika Kihara; Editing by Sam Holmes
and Mark Potter)
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