Signs of eurozone manufacturing downturn as demand falls: S&P Global




The S&P Global eurozone manufacturing purchasing managers’ index (PMI) fell from 54.6 in May to 52.1 in June, its lowest reading since August 2020 and a fifth consecutive month of decline in the headline measure. Driving the deterioration was a June contraction of output, which dropped for the first time in two years, the US-based financial information firm said.

Worse looks set to come, according to the survey’s other sub-indices. Several survey gauges are now consistent with an imminent industrial recession and period of economic distress.

The S&P Global eurozone manufacturing purchasing managers’ index fell from 54.6 in May to 52.1 in June, its lowest reading since August 2020 and a fifth consecutive month of decline in the headline measure. Driving the deterioration was a June contraction of output, which dropped for the first time in two years, the US-based financial information firm said.

One upside to the weakening of business conditions in the sector was a cooling of price pressures, albeit with energy and food supply remaining major concerns in the outlook for inflation, S&P global said in a press release.

The first drop in production for two years was primarily a function of a steepening downturn in demand. Orders for goods have fallen at an accelerating rate over the past two months, dropping in June in every country surveyed with the exception of the Netherlands, and even here the rate of growth has weakened markedly in recent months.

The overall drop in eurozone manufacturing new orders was among the steepest seen over the past decade, with demand falling across the board for consumer goods, investment goods and intermediate goods, the company said.

Demand is now weakening as firms report customers to be growing more cautious in relation to spending due to rising prices and the uncertain economic outlook.

Looking at inventories, both raw materials and unsold stock are now rising due to lower than expected production and sales volumes respectively, hinting that an inventory correction will act as an additional drag on the sector in coming months.

Looking at the resulting new-orders-to-inventory ratio, which acts as a reliable lead indicator of output, this gauge has fallen to a level for which only the global financial crisis and initial impact of the pandemic saw more distressed readings.

One upside to the recent weakening of demand is an alleviation of some supply chain constraints, which has in turn helped cool inflationary pressures for industrial goods. With the survey data indicating an increasing likelihood of the manufacturing sector slipping into a recession, these price pressures should ease further in the third quarter this year.

Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)





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