Japan Flash Manufacturing PMI Signals Solid Q1 GDP

 | Mar 26, 2017 06:04

PMI data signal the slowest rate of growth of Japan’s manufacturing sector since December 2016. At 52.6 in March, the Nikkei Flash Japan Manufacturing PMI was down from 53.3 in February.

However, the PMI has now remained above the 50.0 no-change level for seven successive months, and the average reading over the first quarter is the highest since the first quarter of 2014, indicating solid growth momentum.

The headline manufacturing PMI comprises various sub-indices derived from survey questions on output, new orders, employment, inventories and suppliers’ delivery times. This means the PMI acts as a broad indicator of the health of the manufacturing sector.

The sub-indices reveal more detail about each month’s performance than the headline PMI. At the moment, exports continue to grow at a steady clip, as yen weakness boosts competitiveness, although some pull-back in export growth was seen in March due to the yen’s recent recovery against the US dollar.

The currency’s weakness means inflationary pressures have risen, with input prices climbing markedly.

Further increases in new orders, backlogs of work and purchasing activity, albeit at softer rates, meanwhile all point to the upturn continuing in April.

The Flash PMI data reinforce confidence that the sustained expansion in the manufacturing sector will provide a significant fillip to the economy in the first quarter. February’s Nikkei Japan Services PMI also point to a robust tertiary sector performance.

h3 Manufacturing output/h3