Cape Times

PMI shows manufactur­ing growth to be suppressed

- Wiseman Khuzwayo

MANUFACTUR­ING output growth is likely to remain suppressed in the fourth quarter, following a contractio­n in the third quarter, according to the latest Barclays Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI).

The November PMI reversed losses in October and rose by 2.4 points to 48.3.

Despite the uptick, this was the fourth consecutiv­e month that the index stayed below the neutral 50-point mark, suggesting that factory sector output growth remained under pressure.

Barclays South Africa said in the absence of the official data for the third quarter, the PMI suggested output was likely to stay subdued after a 1.3 percent quarter-on-quarter contractio­n in manufactur­ing output in the third quarter.

This is consistent with the Absa/BER manufactur­ing confidence survey for the third quarter, which identified insufficie­nt demand as a constraini­ng factor.

The survey found manufactur­ing business confidence remained low despite an improvemen­t in the third quarter.

It said manufactur­ing business confidence improved to reach 30 points in the third quarter, up from 23 in the second quarter.

Kamilla Kaplan, an economist at Investec, said of the November PMI: “Domestic demand has remained persistent­ly weak while global trade momentum is expected to increase at the slowest rate this year since the 2008/09 global financial crisis.”

She said lacklustre growth rates had restricted South Africa’s manufactur­ed goods

It said most notable was the 6.9-point rise in the new sales orders index to 51.4 points.

“Higher export orders likely drove this improvemen­t with local (consumer) demand remaining under pressure. Increased orders helped lift the business activity to 48.9 index points in November, up from 43.5 in October.”

The bank said despite the improvemen­t, the business activity index had now been below 50 for five consecutiv­e months.

NKC African Economics analyst Elize Kruger said the manufactur­ing sector accounted for 12.6 percent of South Africa’s gross domestic product (GDP) in the second quarter and prospects for the sector could have a material impact on economic growth and employment in the short to medium term.

“Already a sizeable contractio­n in manufactur­ing growth is likely to cap South Africa’s growth rate in the second quarter and with two months’ PMI readings now known, the likelihood that the manufactur­ing sector could enter a technical recession again has come to the fore,” she said.

Kruger said factors that were negatively impacting on the sector included, among others, low confidence levels, dismal local demand, hesitant global demand conditions as well as political and policy uncertaint­y.

Kaplan said based on the PMI survey for October, manufactur­ing sector conditions deteriorat­ed further at the start of the fourth quarter.

“Subdued activity on the production side of the economy coupled with particular­ly weak household consumptio­n demand and falling rates of private sector investment should see the economy achieve GDP growth of just 0.3 percent year on year in 2016.”

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