Manufacturing growth slides further
Media release
March 13, 2008
Manufacturing growth slides further
New Zealand's manufacturing sector
experienced a fourth consecutive slip in expansion as the
sluggish start to the year continued, according to the Bank
of New Zealand - Business NZ Performance of Manufacturing
Index (PMI).
The seasonally adjusted PMI for February stood at
52.2, which was 1.0 point lower than the January result and
below the PMI's average value of 54.5 since the survey began
in 2002. A PMI reading above 50.0 indicates that
manufacturing is generally expanding; below 50.0 that it is
declining. PMI values for February in the years 2002-2007
have ranged from 51.7-56.8. Although all February months
have shown expansion, the 2008 result was the second lowest
February value, with the 2006 figure following on from a
significant period of contraction for the
sector. Business NZ chief executive Phil O'Reilly said
the slowdown for the domestic sector was mirroring offshore
movements where the global manufacturing scene was feeling
the effect of subdued economic expansion. "The
negativity amongst New Zealand's manufacturers continues to
deepen, with the exchange rate remaining a key obstacle to
boosting activity." Mr O'Reilly says the key diffusion
indices of production and new orders confirm the downturn in
growth, with values for the two indexes during the first two
months of 2008 similar to the listless period of activity
for 2005/2006.
"The ongoing lacklustre results for
the two North Island regions remains a concern, although it
is pleasing to see manufacturing in the Canterbury/Westland
region remains relatively strong." For the first time
in eight months, not all the main diffusion indices recorded
expansion. This was due to employment (48.3) contracting
for the first time since June 2007. New orders (54.1) led
the way for February, and remained largely unchanged from
the previous month, however it was at its lowest level since
March 2006. Production (51.6) was almost exactly at January
levels, while finished stocks (53.9) and deliveries (52.7)
both fell from January. Unadjusted activity for
February showed it was the South Island leading the
expansion. The Canterbury/Westland region (57.0) rose in
expansion for February, and led the way for the month. The
Otago/Southland region (52.4) experienced its third
consecutive drop in expansion, mainly due to a fall-off in
production and employment. The two North Island regions
continued to exhibit a decline, although not as pronounced
as January. Both the Northern and Central regions stood at
48.9, with the third consecutive fall in activity for the
latter. Unadjusted results for the various
manufacturing industries were a combination of contraction
and expansion. The petroleum, coal, chemical & associated
product sector (60.3) bounced back from the January decline
to lead the way in February. ENDS