City
Epaper

PMI slips to 56.5 but remains firmly in expansionary territory

By ANI | Updated: December 2, 2024 16:15 IST

New Delhi [India], December 2 : India's manufacturing sector demonstrated resilience in November despite headwinds owing to price pressures ...

Open in App

New Delhi [India], December 2 : India's manufacturing sector demonstrated resilience in November despite headwinds owing to price pressures and fierce competition.

The seasonally adjusted HSBC India Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index™ (PMI) stood at 56.5, down from October's 57.5, marking a joint 11-month low. However, the figure remained well above the long-run average, signalling sustained expansion in the sector.

A positive demand trend underpinned expansion in sales and output. However, competitive market dynamics and escalating costs moderated the pace of growth.

Input cost inflation, driven by higher prices for chemicals, cotton, leather, and rubber, grew to its highest level since July, compelling manufacturers to raise output charges at the steepest rate since October 2013.

Pranjul Bhandari, Chief India Economist at HSBC, said, "India recorded a 56.5 manufacturing PMI in November, down slightly from the prior month, but still firmly within expansionary territory. Strong broad-based international demand, evidenced by a four-month high in new export orders, fuelled the Indian manufacturing sector's continued growth."

"At the same time, however, the rate of output expansion is decelerating due to intensifying price pressures. Input prices for a variety of intermediate goods including chemicals, cotton, leather, and rubber rose in November, while output prices soared to an eleven-year high as rising input, labour, and transportation costs were passed on to consumers," he added.

Domestic sales growth faced hurdles due to inflationary pressures, yet international demand surged to a four-month high. Export orders saw robust growth from countries like Italy, UK, Bangladesh, China, and the US, as Indian manufacturers capitalized on global demand.

The manufacturing sector continued to expand its workforce for the ninth consecutive month. Despite softening from October levels, job creation remained robust, with employers hiring both permanent and temporary staff to support production needs.

Meanwhile, input purchasing remained strong, reflecting manufacturers' efforts to build inventories and prepare for future demand. Although the pace of buying slowed to its weakest in nearly a year, manufacturers benefited from improved supplier performance and shorter lead times.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalSenior Hamas delegation arrives in Cairo to hold talks with Egyptian officials for ceasefire agreement

MumbaiMumbai: BTech Student Among Three Held for Duping Trader of Rs 15 Lakh

NationalPoster controversy: Police disperse protestors in Jaipur, say situation under control

NationalGujarat: Vadodara woman duped of Rs 5.61 lakh in visa scam, complaint filed

NationalRetaliatory actions against Pak reflect India’s strong policy against those promoting terror: Raksha Khadse

Business Realted Stories

BusinessMillions benefited from Ayushman health cards, now is the time for Delhi: Hardeep Puri

BusinessViksit Bharat will be driven by start-ups and innovation: IIT Madras Director

BusinessIndia sees robust 10.35 pc annual growth in domestic airline passengers in FY25

BusinessSwiggi Instamart to create dedicated 'cooperative' category on its platform, signs MoU

BusinessIDFC FIRST Bank posts nearly 60 pc net profit loss at Rs 295.6 crore in Q4 FY25