India’s manufacturing industry improved substantially at the start of 2024 with factory activity expanding at its fastest pace in four months in January on robust demand and an upbeat year-ahead outlook, a private survey showed on Thursday.
The HSBC final India Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index, compiled by S&P Global, rose to 56.5 in January from December’s 18-month low of 54.9.
Although the final reading was a tad lower than a preliminary estimate of 56.9, it was comfortably above the 50-mark that separates expansion from contraction. It has been above breakeven since June 2021.
India will remain the fastest-growing major economy this year and next, bolstered by heavy government spending, according to a recent Reuters poll.
However, the government will target narrowing the fiscal deficit as a percentage of GDP, showed another Reuters poll. The budget for the fiscal year 2024/25, due to be announced later on Thursday, is expected to strike a balance between populist measures and fiscal prudence.
The PMI’s new orders sub-index, also supported by international demand, rose sharply to its highest since September, stretching the current sequence of expansion to over two-and-a-half years.
“India’s final manufacturing PMI showed that manufacturing activity accelerated in January. Current output expanded on robust demand, with domestic orders growing at a faster pace than export orders,” noted Ines Lam, economist at HSBC.
Strong demand and with an optimistic year-ahead outlook prompted firms to scale up their buying of raw materials. The future output sub-index strengthened to a 13-month high while purchasing rose at the fastest pace since September.
However, there was hardly any change in employment levels from December as firms reported sufficient capacity for their current workloads.
Despite input cost inflation ticking to a three-month high, the rate of increase was marginal.
Prices charged increased mildly as firms passed on some of the additional cost burden to clients in response to greater rubber, steel, packing materials, transportation and wage costs.
Inflation in India was near the upper limit of the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) target range of 2-6% in November and December but the central bank is not expected to cut interest rates until at least July.