Business Standard

Nikkei India Manufacturing PMI rises to 5-month high in March 2017

Image

Capital Market

Growth of new work and output gathers pace

The health of India's manufacturing sector improved for the third straight month in March, and to the greatest extent since October 2016. Incoming new orders expanded at a stronger pace, thereby leading to quicker increases in production and input purchasing. Moreover, firms hired additional employees to cope with greater workloads. Although both input costs and output charges rose further, inflation rates softened from those seen in February.

Rising to a five-month high of 52.5 in March, from 50.7 in February, the seasonally adjusted Nikkei India Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' IndexTM (PMITM) - a composite indicator designed to provide a single-figure snapshot of the performance of the manufacturing economy - indicated that operating conditions in the sector improved to a greater extent. As for the January-to-March quarter, the PMI average (51.2) was the lowest seen since Q1 FY 2016/17 (51.0).

 

Amid evidence of strengthening demand conditions, the level of new orders received by manufacturers rose solidly in March and at the quickest pace in five months. Likewise, production expanded at the strongest rate since last October as firms sought to fulfil new and existing projects. The increase in total new work was supported by higher new export orders, which grew at a solid and accelerated pace. New work and output increased across the three monitored sub-sectors, with the upturn led by intermediate goods producers in both cases.

Indian manufacturers purchased greater quantities of inputs for use in the production process during March, with the latest upturn in buying levels the strongest in the current three-month sequence of expansion.

This resulted in an overall increase in stocks of purchases. Having fallen in each of the previous three months, pre-production inventories rose modestly in March. Conversely, holdings of finished items dipped sharply due to production volumes failing to match requirements for existing projects.

Business confidence among manufacturers improved in March, with almost one-fifth of panellists expecting output levels at their units to be higher in 12 months time. Forecasts of a pick-up in demand and the launch of new product lines were the main factors underpinning optimism.

Reversing the decline noted in February, manufacturing jobs rose in March as some firms took on extra staff in line with efforts to expand capacity. Despite accelerating to the fastest in almost four years, the rate of job creation was only slight. Concurrently, outstanding business increased to the weakest extent in 2017 so far.

Largely reflecting higher commodity prices, average input costs increased again. That said, the rate of inflation slowed to the weakest in four months and was below the long-run survey average. Similarly, the rate of charge inflation moderated during March as 96% of manufacturers reportedly kept selling prices unchanged in tandem with attempts to stimulate demand.

Commenting on the Indian Manufacturing PMI survey data, Pollyanna De Lima, Economist at IHS Markit and author of the report, said "PMI data for March reveal positive developments in the Indian manufacturing sector. Rates of expansion in factory orders and production accelerated again, encouraging some companies to scale up their input buying and take on additional workers. The favourable demand environment was supported by relatively muted inflationary pressures. Given that input costs rose at a softer pace, a whopping 96% of goods producers kept their selling prices unchanged over the month. Looking ahead, production volumes are likely to rise further as businesses will seek to replenish their stocks. Indeed, we saw a marked drop in inventories of finished items, alongside a stronger degree of confidence towards the year-ahead outlook for output. Out of the three broad areas of manufacturing, intermediate goods was March's shining star, as growth of new work, production and input buying in this category surpassed those seen at consumer and capital goods firms."

Powered by Capital Market - Live News

Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content

Don't miss the most important news and views of the day. Get them on our Telegram channel

First Published: Apr 03 2017 | 10:28 AM IST

Explore News