Monday, November 10, 2025
32.8 C
Lagos

Stanbic IBTC PMI: Inflationary Pressures Mount over Fuel Subsidy Removal

The removal of fuel subsidy in Nigeria caused a sharp strengthening of price pressures in June.

In turn, rates of expansion in output and new orders softened but remained marked nonetheless. Business confidence dipped to a near-record low.

Intensifying inflationary pressures encouraged companies to expand inventories to try and get ahead of further price increases.

Meanwhile, employment was up modestly for the second month running. The headline figure derived from the survey is the Stanbic IBTC 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 remained above the 50.0 no-change mark in June. Although dipping slightly to 53.2 from 54.0 in May, the reading signaled a solid monthly improvement in the health of the private sector.

While overall business conditions remained on a positive trajectory, firms faced a much stronger inflationary environment at the end of the second quarter of the year, linked to the removal of the fuel subsidy. Purchase prices increased at the fastest pace since last August, while the rate of selling price inflation accelerated sharply to the steepest in the year-to-date as firms passed higher costs on to their customers.

Issues around the ending of the fuel subsidy also acted to limit the pace of output growth, according to respondents, although activity was still up markedly in the latest survey period. Output has now risen in each of the past three months amid higher customer numbers and growth of new orders. Wholesale & retail bucked the wider trend and posted a drop-in activity. New business was also up for the third successive month.

The rate of expansion was marked, albeit the softest in the current sequence of growth. Higher new orders encouraged firms to expand employment for the second month running, although the pace of job creation was again only modest. Despite increasing staffing levels, firms recorded a build-up of backlogs of work, due to an expansion in new business and some difficulties securing inputs. Some companies reported having brought forward purchasing and expanded inventories ahead of predicted increases in the costs of materials in the months ahead.

This, allied with increasing workloads, meant that stocks of purchases were accumulated to the largest degree in eight months. Business confidence dropped to the second-lowest on record in June and was only fractionally above last November’s nadir.

Companies remained optimistic that output will increase over the coming year, however, linked to investment, business expansion plans, and proposed marketing drives.

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

Fidelity Bank Champions Support for the Elderly

L-R: Igwe Quincy Chibuike, Team Member, Prolific Inductees Class...

Fidelity Bank Partners NCF, Lagos State to Promote Responsible Waste Management

L-R: Area Manager, Policy, Government and Public Affairs (PGPA),...

Stanbic IBTC Pension Managers Supports ART X Lagos 2025 to Celebrate African Creativity

As West Africa’s leading art fair, ART X Lagos, marks its...

NGX Reaffirms Leadership in Advancing Africa’s Islamic Finance Ecosystem

Nigerian Exchange Limited (NGX) has reaffirmed its leadership in...

Sovereign Trust Insurance CEO, Olaotan Soyinka, Preaches Caution, Safety in the Ember Months

Mr. Olaotan Soyinka, Managing Director of Sovereign Trust Insurance...

Topics

Moniepoint Strengthens Efforts to Broaden Financial Access Through Collaborative Initiatives

Africa’s fastest growing financial institution according to the Financial...

Airlines Financial Monitor: February

Key Points: · Worldwide airline share prices increased by 4.7%...

MMM: End of the Road or Bigger Beginning?

For Nigerian investors in the Mavrodi Mundial Moneybox (MMM)...

NLNG Receives FIRS’ Most Compliant Taxpayer Award

NLNG’s representative, Titi Horsfall (2nd left) receives the FIRS’...

Modernising African Payment Systems Set for Sept 14

The Modernising African Payment Systems virtual event will take place September 14th at 10:00...

FSI, Mentors Without Borders Launch Tech Mentorship Program at Thomas Adewunmi Varsity

Financial Services Innovators (FSI), in partnership with Mentors Without...

Arsenal, Emirates Make Football History in Sponsorship Deal

Emirates, the world’s largest international airline, and Arsenal Football...

Nigerian, Shola Taylor Appointed Secretary-General of CTO

A Nigerian, Shola Taylor has been appointed secretary-general of the Commonwealth Telecommunications Organisation (CTO), an international treaty organisation headquartered in London. Mr Taylor is expected to start in this new role on 17 September this year. A Nigerian citizen, Mr Taylor is currently the chief executive officer of Kemilinks International, a global ICT consultancy firm based in Lagos. A telecommunications engineer by training, he brings to the CTO over 35 years of global experience in ICTs with government and the private sector. Previous positions held include regional director for Africa at Inmarsat (1994 - 1999), space technology coordinator for developing countries at the International Telecommunication Union (ITU, 1993 - 1994) and project director, also at the ITU (1987 - 1993).
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img