Record Rise In Global Manufacturing PMI Output Index

 | Jul 03, 2020 06:39

  • Global manufacturing PMI output stages record gain in June. Rise points to substantial easing in annual rate of decline.
  • Growth reported in 14 out of 31 countries surveyed.
  • Falling exports continued to act as key order book drag, sentiment also remains subdued despite rising.
  • A key gauge of global manufacturing output showed a record gain in June, adding to signs that the world's factories are recovering strongly since the peak impact from the COVID-19 pandemic back in April. However, prospects beyond an initial rebound from lockdowns remain uncertain, with business sentiment and order books well below levels seen earlier in the year, with weak global trade flows acting as a notable drag.

    Record rise in output index

    The output index from the JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM) Global Manufacturing PMI survey, compiled by IHS Markit from its proprietary business surveys, rose from 39.1 in May to 47.0 in June, surging by an unprecedented 7.9 index points to reach its highest since January. The rise builds on a prior record gain in May and brings the index back to it highest since January.

    The record improvement in the index is put into perspective when compared against official manufacturing output data. Since 2007, when IHS Markit's US PMI data were first included in the index, the global PMI's output gauge has exhibited an 84% correlation with the annual rate of change of official production data, underscoring how the PMI provides a very accurate guide to changing output trends. Importantly, the PMI signals are available several months ahead of the comparable official data.

    A simple OLS regression can be used to determine what a PMI reading implies in terms of annual growth [*]. The PMI-implied annual growth rate can be estimated as follows:

    Global manufacturing output annual % change = PMI output index x 0.0101 - 0.506