Robust demand boosts India factory growth in June, PMI shows

robust demand boosts india factory growth in june, pmi shows

FILE PHOTO: A worker prepares a blade of a power-generating windmill turbine at the plant of Adani Green Energy Ltd (AGEL) in Mundra, India, April 11, 2024. REUTERS/Amit Dave/File Photo

By Shaloo Shrivastava

BENGALURU (Reuters) - Activity in India's manufacturing sector rebounded last month as output increased on robust demand, leading to the fastest rate of hiring in over 19 years, despite inflationary pressures remaining elevated, a survey showed.

Strong demand is a much needed ingredient for growth in Asia's third-largest economy, which is the fastest growing among major economies, but much of the expansion is attributed to the government's infrastructure spending.

The HSBC final India Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index, compiled by S&P Global, rose to 58.3 in June, marginally below a preliminary 58.5 estimate, from a three-month low of 57.5 in May.

"The Indian manufacturing sector ended the June quarter on stronger footing," said Maitreyi Das, global economist at HSBC.

"While the overall outlook for the manufacturing sector remains positive, the future output index receded to a three-month low, albeit it remains above the historical average."

Upbeat demand lifted the output and new order sub-indexes in June, stretching the current sequence of expansion to three years. Growth in international demand eased in June, but stayed above the long run average.

Bigger workloads generated more jobs. Hiring increased for a fourth consecutive month and at the sharpest rate since the survey began over 19 years ago.

This was despite business sentiment falling to a three-month low, however, it remained strong and above the long-run average.

An improvement in hiring would bring some respite to the ruling Bhartiya Janta Party, which has lost its parliamentary majority, and had to form its third-term government with the support of regional parties.

Creating jobs would be the biggest challenge for the government over the next five years, a Reuters poll of policy experts found.

Inflationary pressures remained elevated, the PMI survey showed. While cost prices increased at a marginally slower pace from May, prices charged to customers rose at the fastest pace in two years.

"Manufacturers were able to pass on higher costs to customers, as demand remained robust, resulting in improved margin," added Das.

However, inflation will average near the mid-point of the Reserve Bank of India's (RBI) target range of 2-6%, at 4.6% and 4.5% in the current and next fiscal years, the latest Reuters survey showed.

The RBI was expected to lower its interest rate next quarter by 25 basis points to 6.25%, followed by another cut of the same size in the January-March quarter, the Reuters survey showed.

(Reporting by Shaloo Shrivastava; Editing by Kim Coghill)

OTHER NEWS

4 hrs ago

Bank of Japan starts issuing new banknotes, expected to be available to public from noon

4 hrs ago

Shashi Tharoor Exclusive: How the Congress MP Celebrated the Victory in Midnight| Watch Now

5 hrs ago

Japan's first new banknotes in 20 years use holograms to defeat counterfeits

5 hrs ago

Hyundai Ioniq 5 Sales Hit New U.S. Record In Q2 2024

5 hrs ago

Why FedEx Stock Hit the Gas in June

5 hrs ago

Celtics bring back two bench players, Kornet and Tillman

6 hrs ago

Amazon counts on 'grit and innovation' to meet AI surge

6 hrs ago

Finding aliens: Is there a ‘theory of everything’ for life?

6 hrs ago

Exclusive-Constellation talking to Pennsylvania on Three Mile Island restart, sources say

6 hrs ago

Turkey, US in talks on nuclear plant projects, Turkish official says

6 hrs ago

What Is the Dividend Payout for JPMorgan Chase?

6 hrs ago

Bronny James ready for pressure after 'surreal' Lakers move

6 hrs ago

Report: Warriors acquire Wolves F Kyle Anderson in sign-and-trade

6 hrs ago

Vietnam finalising plan for fund to attract foreign investment

6 hrs ago

Citgo Parent Sale Hearing Delayed as Special Master Weighs Bids

7 hrs ago

Positano and Amalfi, picture-perfect villages on the Italian coast

7 hrs ago

Shares edge higher, US Treasury yields weaken as markets weigh Fed chair comments

7 hrs ago

Apple poised to get OpenAI board observer role as part of AI pact, Bloomberg News reports

7 hrs ago

Biden blames poor debate performance on travel exhaustion

7 hrs ago

Google greenhouse gas emissions grow as it powers AI

7 hrs ago

Four-time All-Star guard Kemba Walker announces his retirement from basketball

7 hrs ago

Transfer: Tijani completes loan move to Plymouth Argyle

7 hrs ago

US second-quarter new vehicle sales growth slows after CDK cyber attack

7 hrs ago

Rivian and Tesla Stocks Soared in June. Does That Signal a Buying Opportunity?

8 hrs ago

US dollar inches lower as dovish Powell comments offset upbeat jobs data

8 hrs ago

Pesky mink tries to steal fisherman's catch

8 hrs ago

2 Stocks Down 74% and 57.5% to Buy Right Now

8 hrs ago

Euro 2024: Ronaldo gave us lesson – Portugal coach, Martinez

8 hrs ago

‘No growth will happen’ – Dangote kicks against CBN’s interest rate

9 hrs ago

Tesla Autopilot NEW Pedestrian Animations EXTREME TEST

9 hrs ago

Obasanjo visits Southeast govs

9 hrs ago

I bought a $600 Tiny Tesla Model S

9 hrs ago

Turkey set up Euros quarter-final with Dutch after thrilling win over Austria

10 hrs ago

Shark Tank Food Inventions That Were Big Fails

10 hrs ago

ABU laments N3.6bn electricity bill

10 hrs ago

South East govs to meet Tinubu over detained Nnamdixa0Kanu

10 hrs ago

Corruption: I wonder how Nigeria is still surviving, says EFCC chairman

10 hrs ago

Reps ask Umahi to revoke East-West road contract over poor execution

10 hrs ago

Russia seen hiking rates by 200 bps to 18% in July as inflation quickens: Reuters poll

10 hrs ago

Mohammed yet to decide future after Wikki Tourists exit