Exports Act As Further Drag On Economies, But Trade Downturn Shows Signs Of Easing

 | Aug 05, 2020 07:10

  • Global manufacturing PMI data show upturn restrained by a further deterioration in global trade, albeit with downturn easing
  • Only five countries reported rising exports in July, led by Ireland and Germany
  • Weak export demand in Asia-Pacific remains a particular concern, but Australia has seen the mildest export downturn so far this year
  • Factories worldwide continued to report falling export sales in July as disruptions to demand and supply from COVID-19 lockdowns exacerbated the damaging impact of trade wars seen prior to the pandemic. However, the downturn in trade has moderated considerably since the height of the virus lockdowns, buoyed by signs of improved consumer spending and led by resurgent demand in the euro area. Weak demand for exports continued to act as a major brake on growth in Asia, with Indonesia, Thailand and Japan seeing the sharpest export downturns so far this year.

    Output index

    The JPMorgan Global Manufacturing PMI survey, compiled by IHS Markit from its proprietary business surveys, rose above 50 in July - signalling an improvement in business conditions - for the first time since January. The upturn reflected rising output as firms reopened in increasing numbers after COVID-19 lockdowns, as well as an increase in new orders received by factories during the month.