Thursday 2 May 2024

PH manufacturing posted high growth

PH manufacturing growth hit five-month high in April

By JON VIKTOR D. CABUENAS, 
GMA Integrated News
May 2, 2024 

The Philippine manufacturing sector posted its biggest growth in five months in April on the back of higher output and an increase in new orders, results of the latest survey conducted by S&P Global released on Thursday showed.


The headline S&P Global Philippines Manufacturing PMI stood at 52.2 in April, up from 50.9 in March. A reading above 50.0 indicates an expansion, while levels below the threshold indicate a contraction.

"Building on growth seen in the first quarter of the year, the Filipino manufacturing sector showcased further gains in April," S&P Global Market Intelligence economist Maryam Baluch said in an accompanying statement.

"A quicker rate of expansion was observed for new orders, which in turn triggered a renewed and solid rise in production. Additionally, business from overseas markets also expanded at a stronger rate," she added.

New orders posted the biggest growth since November 2022, while new export orders expanded for the third straight month and at the fastest pace in five months. New work also posted the biggest gain in four months.

The same report found that purchasing efforts at manufacturers saw the quickest upturn in nine months, due to "favourable" demand conditions and higher production requirements, with pre-production stocks accumulated the fastest in 12 months and post-production in 17 months.

Employment continued to grow, but eased slightly from the expansion in March as some firms struggled to complete work in hand, bringing the backlog depletion at the weakest level since August 2023.

Charges for the month were broadly unchanged from March, with input price inflation modest overall.

"Looking ahead, sentiment across the Philippines manufacturing sector was largely positive with nearly a quarter of surveyed businesses predicting growth in production. That said, the degree of confidence slipped to a four-year low," S&P Global said.

The same report found that purchasing efforts at manufacturers saw the quickest upturn in nine months, due to "favourable" demand conditions and higher production requirements, with pre-production stocks accumulated the fastest in 12 months and post-production in 17 months.

Employment continued to grow, but eased slightly from the expansion in March as some firms struggled to complete work in hand, bringing the backlog depletion at the weakest level since August 2023.

Charges for the month were broadly unchanged from March, with input price inflation modest overall.

"Looking ahead, sentiment across the Philippines manufacturing sector was largely positive with nearly a quarter of surveyed businesses predicting growth in production. That said, the degree of confidence slipped to a four-year low," S&P Global said.

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