UK Leads Global Upturn, But Only The US And China Build Capacity For Future Output

 | Sep 04, 2020 07:32

  • Global PMI rises to 52.4 as growth accelerates in the UK, US, China and Brazil
  • But eurozone growth is hampered by rising virus infection worries
  • Only the US and China see firms building capacity for faster growth in coming months
  • The worldwide PMI surveys indicated a further strengthening of global economic growth in August as countries continued to recover from coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) lockdowns, with the JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM) Global PMI hitting a near one-and-a-half year high of 52.4, but different countries showed varying degrees of resilience in terms of their economies rebounding. Of concern, countries seeing the sharpest escalation of COVID-19 infections saw renewed downturns in business activity, and employment trends have worsened in some countries despite stronger output growth.

    UK leads global upturn

    The strongest expansion among the largest developed and emerging markets in August was recorded in the United Kingdom, where the composite PMI hit a six-year high of 59.1 as growth accelerated in both manufacturing and service sectors. Service sector growth was the sharpest since April 2015, while factory production showed the largest gain since May 2014.

    Russia saw the second-fastest rate of growth, with a composite PMI reading of 57.3 indicating the quickest monthly increase in activity since January 2017. The upturn was led by an especially strong service sector performance, though manufacturers also reported faster production growth.

    Growth meanwhile accelerated again in China after having lost a little momentum in July, with the composite Caixin PMI output index climbing to 55.1. Although below June's recent peak, the latest reading indicated the second-fastest expansion seen over the past decade and the fourth successive monthly improvement. Only the UK and Russia saw faster rates of expansion. With China having locked down its economy earlier to contain the virus, and reopening earlier, the sustained expansion is encouraging for other countries. However, although manufacturing output growth accelerated to the fastest since early 2011, in part linked to renewed export sales, the service sector lost momentum for a second successive month.