Stanbic IBTC Bank PMI – Business Conditions Continued to Improve in October

Output and new orders continue to expand, albeit at softer rates Purchasing activity increases at sharp and accelerated pace Inflationary pressures cool, but remain historically strong.

The start of the fourth quarter revealed a solid improvement in the health of Nigeria’s private sector. Output and new orders rose sharply while purchasing activity increased at an accelerated pace. At the same time, backlogs increased for the second month in a row, with sustained accumulation of outstanding business suggesting that hiring activity could continue in the months ahead.

On the price front, price pressures showed further signs of abating with the overall rate of input cost inflation the weakest for three months, but still marked by historical standards. Selling prices were also raised, albeit at a softer rate than that seen in September.

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 posted at 53.6 in October, little-changed from 53.7 in September, indicating a solid improvement in the health of the private sector.

A key driver of growth was a sharp rise in new orders following reports of favourable and improving market conditions.

In turn, firms raised their output levels and for the fourth month in a row. Moreover, the rate of increase was quicker than the long-run series average. Manufacturing firms registered the strongest increase in output, followed by services, wholesale & retail and finally agriculture.

Backlogs increased for the second month in a row during October, but the rate of increase eased from that in September. Firms subsequently continued hiring activity, but the rate of growth was mild, and the joint-weakest in the current 21-month sequence of job creation.

Sustained expansions in new orders led Nigerian private sector firms to raise their purchasing activity, with the rate of growth quickening on the month. Pre-production inventories also rose robustly, with the rate of growth quickening to a three-month high amid firms’ efforts to boost their stockpiles.

Supply-chain performance improved, with lead times now shortening in each month for the last five years. Meanwhile, prices data revealed another month of overall input price inflation. Higher purchase and staff costs underpinned the latest rise which eased from September, but was sharp and historically elevated, nevertheless. Selling prices also rose, but at the weakest pace for almost two years.

Whilst firms maintained an optimistic view towards output in the next 12 months, the degree of positivity was the second lowest in the series history, with that only recorded in September 2020 weaker.

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

PufferPay CEO, Emmanuel Ovaga, to Keynote Business Journal Fintech & Financial Inclusion Roundtable 2026

Mr. Emmanuel Ovaga, the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of...

SERAP asks Akpabio, Abbas to Explain ₦1.3bn Allocation to ‘Fictitious Presidential Council’

The Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) has urged...

FG to IMF: Response to Recent Misrepresentations on Public Expenditure

The Federal Government has noted recent public commentary alleging...

Topics

Rand Merchant Bank to Facilitate Business Flows into Africa via US Office

                    Rand Merchant Bank (RMB) is now operating from a New...

BPE Pays N1bn to 408 PHCN Staff, Retirees

The 408 active staff and retirees/ Next-of Kins (NOKs) of...

Google Equiano Cable to Boost Nigeria’s GDP by $10bn

Left to right: H.E. Otunba Adeniyi Adebayo - Minister of...

Oxfam Report: 62 People Richer Than Half of World Population

The richest 62 people in the world control more...

NAICOM Chief, Segun Omosehin, Rolls Out 5-Point Agenda for Market Growth

The Commissioner for Insurance/CEO, National Insurance Commission (NAICOM), Mr....

Google Slashes Political Lobbying to $3.8m

Google slashed spending on lobbying by 25.5 percent in...

NSE 2017 Outlook: Economy Will Rebound Marginally

Global Economic Outlook Global economic growth is projected to reach 3.4% in 2017 according to the IMF, while Goldman Sachs’s chief economist puts this estimate at a range of 3.0% to 3.5%. Accordingly, all estimates suggest that there will be positive global growth in 2017.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img