Global Factory Growth Ends 2020 Close To Decade-Highs, But Supply Worsens

 | Jan 05, 2021 06:38

  • Global manufacturing PMI unchanged at 33-month high of 53.8 seen in November
  • Production growth eases only slightly from near-decade high in November, led by Germany, Brazil and India
  • Supply chain delays increase to levels rarely seen over past two decades, pushing prices higher
  • Optimism remains close to five-year highs
  • Global factory output and order book inflows continued to rise at some of the fastest rates seen over the past decade in December, according to the latest PMI survey data, indicating a further recovery from the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) related downturn seen in the first half of the year. The production upturn was led by Germany, followed by Brazil and India.

    However, supply delays have also risen sharply to an extent only exceeded on very rare occasions over the past 25 years, as demand outstripped supply and logistics delays intensified. Input prices have also risen at the sharpest rate for nearly two and a half years as a result of these shortages. More encouragingly, business confidence about the year ahead remained buoyant, albeit losing some ground on November amid rising concerns over escalating virus case numbers in some markets. Employment was held steady as the building of new capacity in some firms was offset by caution in relation to expansion in other firms.