Factory Output has increased in South Africa because manufacturers are producing more. And a recent data shows an spike that has not been seen in Africa’s most industrialized nation in almost 15 years in February though its advance could be short-lived, with input costs likely to rise due to high international oil prices and geopolitical tensions.
Absa Group Limited’s purchasing managers’ index, compiled by the Bureau for Economic Research has climbed to 58.6, from 57.1 at the beginning of the year. That’s the highest monthly reading since March 2007, before the onset of the global financial crisis that prompted a severe contraction in activity. The median of five economists’ estimates in a Bloomberg survey was 56.3.
The main index has now been above 50, the level that signals expansion, for seven consecutive months. This suggests conditions in an industry hard-hit by stop-start coronavirus lockdown restrictions, global supply chain disruptions and the worst civil unrest in South Africa since the end of White-minority rule in 1994 are continuing to normalize.
The monthly advance was driven by improvements in all five subcomponents, including new sales orders and business activity, that make up the index, according to the Johannesburg-based lender.
The lender further gauge expected business conditions over six months’ time that fell to 69.5, from an almost four-year high of 71.3, with purchasing managers remain upbeat. Still, further increases in input costs can’t be fully passed onto consumers while demand is still recovering, which may “sour sentiment,” it said.
Survey respondents flagged potential increases in freight costs that could stem from continued high oil prices or a sudden weakening of the rand as a key concern, Absa said. “Renewed disruptions in the workings of global supply chains amid an escalation of the Ukrainian conflict will not only have cost implications, but could also negatively impact sentiment.”