Hope for Euro zone manufacturing as downturn eases, boosted by China rebound

Hope for Euro zone manufacturing as downturn eases, boosted by China rebound

SummaryChina’s private PMI unexpectedly picks up in‌ AugustChina rebound may be sign official efforts bearing ​fruitLONDON/TOKYO, Sept 1 (Reuters) – A downturn in euro zone manufacturing eased last month, suggesting the worst may be over for the bloc’s beleaguered factories, while an unexpected rebound in China offered some hope for export-reliant ⁣economies, private‌ surveys showed.However, ⁤Europe’s largest​ economy Germany remained a negative outlier among the continent’s big ⁣players, and ​factory activity weakened in much of Asia as manufacturers there felt the pinch from ‌rising input costs and slowing global demand.Central banks have aggressively raised interest rates to rein in steep inflation but ⁢are ⁢likely at ‌or ⁣nearing⁢ the end of tightening cycles as they await⁣ the feed-through ⁤and look⁤ to cushion the blow to their economies from sluggish global demand.HCOB’s final euro zone manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), compiled by S&P⁢ Global, ‍rose to a three-month high ⁤of 43.5 in ‍August from July’s 42.7, albeit below a preliminary reading​ of 43.7. A reading below 50 marks a contraction in ‌activity.An index measuring output, which feeds into a composite PMI due ⁣on Tuesday and seen as a good gauge of economic health, rose to 43.4 from 42.7.”We​ are now in a better position than many had⁣ anticipated given how high interest rates⁣ have risen‍ and how quickly. But it is⁤ very uneven,” said Craig⁤ Erlam at OANDA.”It gives the European Central Bank pause for thought as they don’t want to do too little on the inflation front but they also don’t want to kill the‌ economy.”Germany’s manufacturing sector, which accounts​ for about a fifth of its ‌economy, remained mired in a downturn on⁤ weak ​demand and rapidly falling⁤ output.​ In ‌France, manufacturing contracted for ‌a seventh month in a row.In Britain, ⁢outside the‍ European Union, factories suffered their weakest month since early in the COVID-19 crisis, with orders shrinking dramatically due to rising interest rates at home and ​abroad.MIXED BAGChina’s private Caixin/S&P Global manufacturing PMI‍ rose to 51.0 ​in August from 49.2, ‌beating analysts’ forecasts and exceeding⁣ the 50.0 threshold.The reading came a day after an official survey showed manufacturing activity contracted for a fifth month, ⁣offering‍ a mixed picture on business conditions‍ in the world’s second-largest ⁢economy.While the rebound in ​China’s factory conditions could be a sign that official efforts to revive⁢ growth are starting to have some effect, manufacturing activity ⁢in most of Asia remained stagnant.In⁤ Japan ‌it shrank for a third ‌straight month, while South Korea extended its longest-ever slump on wage pressures and soft exports, the surveys showed.”It’s unlikely we’ll ⁤see a sharp, quick rebound in China’s economy. With the outlook for⁣ advanced economies⁢ also uncertain, it’s hard for Asian companies‌ to be optimistic on the outlook,” ⁤said Toru Nishihama, chief emerging market economist at Dai-ichi Life Research Institute.”Stubborn food…

Post ⁢from www.reuters.com rnrn

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