PMI Surveys Indicate Global Economic Growth Stuck At 3-Year Low

 | Jul 04, 2019 06:50

  • Global PMI™ holds at lowest since June 2016
  • Employment and cost gauges at three-year lows
  • Downside risks to outlook as future expectations hit new survey low
  • Weakness spread across developed and emerging markets
  • The pace of global economic growth remained stuck at a three-year low in June, according to the latest PMI surveys from IHS Markit, rounding off the worst quarterly expansion since the second quarter of 2016. Both employment growth and cost pressures also hit the weakest since 2016, while future business expectations sank to a new survey low.

    A disappointing run of developed world PMI surveys for June concluded the slowest quarter of growth since 2013, with falling output in the UK accompanied by lacklustre growth in the US, Japan and Eurozone, albeit with the latter enjoying the strongest upturn.

    Emerging market growth meanwhile hit a three-year low amid a broad-based deterioration in performance among the largest developing economies. Output fell in Brazil and Russia while slower expansions were seen in both China and India.

    Slowest global growth since June 2016

    The JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM) Global PMI™, compiled by IHS Markit, held steady at 51.2 in June, signalling the slowest rate of expansion of global output since June 2016 during the past two months. The survey data are consistent with worldwide GDP rising at an annual pace of approximately 1.8% (at market prices) in the second quarter, down from 2.4% in the first quarter.

    Both the PMI and official GDP data indicate that the pace of global economic growth peaked at 2.9% at the end of 2017 and has since slowed gradually, led by a steady weakening of worldwide trade flows.