May march for manufacturing activity
16 June 2011
May march for manufacturing activity
The month of May saw the manufacturing sector
continue its march towards stronger expansion, according to
the latest BNZ - BusinessNZ Performance of Manufacturing
Index (PMI The seasonally adjusted PMI for May was 54.7, up
from 52.0 in April and the highest value since June 2010 (a
PMI reading above 50.0 indicates that manufacturing is
generally expanding; below 50.0 that it is declining). Four
of the five indices were in expansion for May, the same as
April. BusinessNZ's executive director for
manufacturing Catherine Beard said that the second
consecutive month of improvement in activity is consistent
with other positive indicators recently seen within the
sector. "Although there have been some recent publicly
announced layoffs in the sector, overall the manufacturing
sector has shown signs of resilience, even in the face of a
high dollar versus the US dollar. It is particularly
pleasing to see such a positive result from Canterbury
manufacturers, which have come back quite quickly into
expansion mode after the February earthquake in a relatively
short space of time." "Official data has shown a lift
in total manufacturing sales, while manufacturing sector
exports have also been steadily rising. Add to that the
latest PMI result showing a pick-up in production and new
orders and the sector is showing encouraging signs after a
turbulent time of late."
BNZ economist Doug Steel said
the May PMI was further evidence of the economic recovery
gathering momentum. "Within the rather diverse
fortunes across the manufacturing sector at present, there
are some rather strong pulses coming through. Surging
commodity income is starting to filter through the economy,
and appears to be one factor behind a lift in manufacturers'
new orders. There are also encouraging signs that domestic
consumer demand is improving, which may amplify the
inventory cycle and the economic recovery we foresee."
Unadjusted results by region showed three of the four
main regions in expansion, with Canterbury/Westland (57.7)
leading the way with its highest value since November 2010.
This was mainly due to improved production and new order
results (both domestically and offshore). The Central
region (57.1) bounced back from a sluggish April result,
while the Northern region (52.3) returned to a very
consistent level of activity for three of the last four
months. In contrast, the Otago/Southland region (45.3)
remained in contraction for the four consecutive months with
employment in the region experiencing a significant drop.
ends