Sharechat Logo

NZ manufacturing activity rises in April led by new orders, production

Thursday 12th May 2016

Text too small?

New Zealand manufacturing activity rose in April, after two months of slowing growth, led by new orders and production, while employment contracted for a third month.

The BNZ-BusinessNZ performance of manufacturing index rose to a seasonally adjusted 56.5 last month from 54.7 in March. A reading of 50 separates expansion from contraction.

The nation's manufacturing sector has been expanding since October 2012 and has held above its long-term average for the past 11 months, which Bank of New Zealand economist Doug Steel said was underpinned by rapid, migrant-driven population growth, a tourism boom, elevated construction activity, low interest rates, rising asset prices, and a robust labour market. Much of that strength was also expected to be reflected in first-quarter retail sales data released tomorrow, a trend expected to continue into the second quarter, he said.

"The bounce in April not only arrests that previous mild momentum loss but affirms the underlying above-average growth pulse that the manufacturing sector has displayed for many

months now," Steel said.

The PMI showed the measure of production rose to 57.9 last month from 55 in March and new orders rose to 60 from 58.2. Finished stocks fell to 53.7 from 55.3 and deliveries rose to 56.8 from 51.9. Employment remained the laggard, improving to 49.5 from 48.6.

Steel said even though the PMI was healthy overall, it may be looking "a bit soft" in terms of gross domestic product in the near term.

He said the caution came mainly from other indicators of the food-processing industry, especially a drop in meat processing in the first quarter, which followed "an earlier surge likely associated with meat pricing, an elevated dairy cow cull, and most importantly weather risks at the time."  

The volume of meat processed in the first quarter was down 10.9 percent from the same quarter last year and dairy product had also been subdued, he said.

The food, beverage and tobacco PMI index slowed to 52.0 in April, its lowest April reading since 2000.

BusinessDesk.co.nz



  General Finance Advertising    

Comments from our readers

No comments yet

Add your comment:
Your name:
Your email:
Not displayed to the public
Comment:
Comments to Sharechat go through an approval process. Comments which are defamatory, abusive or in some way deemed inappropriate will not be approved. It is allowable to use some form of non-de-plume for your name, however we recommend real email addresses are used. Comments from free email addresses such as Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, etc may not be approved.

Related News:

SPG - Change to Executive Team
BGI - Forgiveness of $200,000 of secured indebtedness
General Capital Subsidiary General Finance Market Update
AFT,Massey Ventures,Gilles McIndoe to develop scar treatmen
April 24th Morning Report
Cheers to many fewer grape harvest spills
GTK - Half-Year Results Announcement Date
Government ends war on farming
Sky and BBC Studios renew expanded, multi-year agreement
AOF - Q1 Improved Trading Performance & FY24 Guidance Maintained