PMI Hints At Initial Return To Growth As Countries Ease COVID-19 Restrictions

 | Jul 08, 2020 07:23

  • Global PMI shows record rise for second month running as economies open up after lockdowns
  • Improved output gauges seen in all countries and all 26 sectors, led by China and by banking services
  • Business confidence rises, and job losses ease
  • V-shaped recoveries by no means assured
  • The worldwide PMI surveys produced by IHS Markit hinted at a return of global economic growth in June. China led a broad-based improvement in the business survey data to add to signs that business activity is rebounding sharply since the height of the COVID-19 lockdowns in April. However, a V-shaped recovery remains far from certain, as demand will need to rise further and job markets remain resilient to prevent a renewed loss of momentum.

    Global PMI shows another record rise

    The JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM) Global PMI™ (compiled by IHS Markit) jumped by a record 11.4 index points in June, building on a prior record increase of just over 10 index points in May to push the index to a five-month high. Despite the rise, at 47.7, the PMI remained below the no-change 50.0 level to indicate a fifth successive monthly deterioration of output across the combined manufacturing and service sectors.

    More encouragingly, when compared to official data, the strong improvement in the survey index in June is indicative of a return to annual GDP growth for the global economy for the first time since January. Whereas 50.0 means that the number of companies reporting higher output and lower output are in balance, an index reading of 46.7 is in fact the cut-off between global GDP rising or falling on an annual basis.

    We use a linear regression to estimate the annual growth rate of GDP implied by the PMI. This model indicates that the annual rate of decline likely peaked at approximately 12% back in April at the height of worldwide COVID-19 related lockdowns, but that the relaxation of virus restrictions has helped drive a 0.6% annual rate of growth in June. However, even with the improvement in the data since April, the latest numbers still point to a second quarter downturn in GDP of a scale unprecedented in recent history.