Saturday, January 10, 2026
33.3 C
Lagos

Stanbic IBTC Bank Nigeria PMI: Private Sector Activity Growth Eases in August

Business conditions in Nigeria’s private sector improved modestly midway through the third quarter, but the rate of growth slowed from that seen in July. Softer upticks were recorded in output, new orders and purchasing activity while employment rose at a quicker pace.

At the same time, overall input price inflation rose at the second-fastest rate on record while sentiment moderated to the weakest since last November. The headline figure derived from the survey is the Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI).

Readings above 50.0 signal an improvement in business conditions on the previous month, while readings below 50.0 show a deterioration. The headline PMI registered at 52.3 in August, down from 53.2 in July, signalling another improvement in business conditions.

That said, the rate of growth was weaker than the long-run series average. New orders rose for the twenty-sixth month running in August which panellists linked to general improvements in customer demand. The rate of growth did ease from July, however, amid elevated prices. Higher sales underpinned a second successive uptick in output in the Nigerian private sector.

The rate of growth was broadly in line with that seen in July but was softer than the long-run series average. Of the four monitored subsectors, three registered output growth. Agriculture topped the rankings, followed by wholesale & retail and services, respectively.

Manufacturers, meanwhile, recorded a fall in output levels during August. Despite slowdowns in output and new order growth, firms added to their headcounts at a quicker pace in August. The overall rate of job creation was modest and the highest for three months.

Subsequently, firms continued to reduce their backlogs, but the rate of decline was fractional amid difficulties sourcing some key inputs. Advance payments led to quicker supplier delivery times in August.

In fact, vendor performance improved to the greatest extent in three months. Quicker lead times allowed firms to add to their inventory holdings. Stocks of purchases rose at a slower pace to that seen in July, however.

On the price front, higher commodity and transportation expenses exerted upward pressures on purchase costs. At the same time, firms raised their staff wages to motivate their workforces and in light of higher living expenses.

The overall rate of input price inflation was the second-fastest in the survey’s history, surpassed only by that seen in November 2021. Looking ahead, firms remained optimistic of output growth in the year ahead, as has been the case since the survey began in January 2014, but the degree of positivity was the weakest for nine months.

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

GCR Upgrades NEM Insurance Rating to AA+ on Sustained Profitable Growth, Stable Outlook

GCR Ratings (GCR) has upgraded NEM Insurance Plc’s national...

A Rejoinder To ‘Bola’s Tax’: When ‘Simple Logic’ Becomes Simple Misdirection

  Dr. Zacch Adedeji Executive Chairman FIRS By Tanimu Yakubu THE essay you circulated...

Tinubu Applauds NGX N100tn Milestone, Charges Nigerians to Invest More Locally

President Bola Tinubu has praised corporate Nigeria, citizens, and...

Topics

Stanbic IBTC Bank Nigeria PMI: Output Growth Hits 6-Month High in October

October data pointed to improved growth momentum in the...

Verve Expands to UAE, Activates 1st Transaction in Dubai

Verve, a leading payments technology and card business in...

Leadway Group Showcases Unified Products, Services Offering via Leadway One Campaign 

The Leadway Group, one of Nigeria's leading non-banking financial...

ICAN Visits Union Bank of Nigeria for Strategic Partnership

The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN) recently...

Indian Achieves 1OOm Mobile Phone Manufacturing Capacity

The manufacturing capacity of mobile phone factories in India...

NMRC: Affordable Housing Expands Economic Growth

As the continent’s largest economy, international development experts, innovators...

IATA: Passenger Airport Charges Double in 10 Years

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) calls on the...

Royal Exchange Reports N8.43bn Premium in 6 Months

Royal Exchange Plc, one of Nigeria’s premier insurance and financial services group, has announced that it has generated a Gross Written Premium of N8.43 billion from its business activities in the first half of the 2016 financial year, representing an increase of 34 percent over the figure of 2015, which stood at N6.28 billion.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img