PRAGUE, Sept 1 (Reuters) - The Czech Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) dropped to 47.3 in August from 49.9 in July, falling below the critical 50.0 mark for the second month running, Markit Economics and ABN Amro said on Monday.
It was the first back-to-back contraction of the sector in almost six years. **************************************************************** KEY POINTS:
AUG 08 JULY 08 AUG 07 Purchasing Managers' Index 47.3 49.9 58.8 Output 45.7 49.9 61.2 New orders 45.0 50.2 60.3 (Full table of data...............................[
]- A figure above 50 indicates expansion on the previous month while a number below 50 signals contraction.
- The headline index falls from 49.9 to 47.3, the lowest figure since data were first collected in July 2001.
- The overall contraction of the manufacturing sector in August reflects a further fall in output and the first decline in new business since September 2002. In both cases, the rate of contraction is a survey record.
- Latest data and anecdotal evidence suggest both domestic and export market conditions weaken during the month, with a specific mention given to an EU slowdown impacting on export sales and the strong currency undermining firms' international competitiveness.
- The production declines for the second month in a row in August. The latest sub-50 reading from the output is only the fourth in the series history. Moreover, the index slumps to a new survey low of 45.7, indicating a sharp rate of decline.
- The volume of incoming new business received by Czech manufacturers declines for the first time in almost six years in August, as signalled by the new orders index falling below the neutral level of 50.0. Moreover, the latest reading of 45.0 is the lowest in the survey history and indicates a sharp decline.
- New export business in the Czech manufacturing economy declines for the second month running in August, the first back-to-back fall since March 2003. The new export orders fall sharply to a new low of 44.5, indicating a strong contraction.
- Accompanying an overall contraction of the manufacturing economy is a weakening of inflationary pressure on firms' input costs in August. Input price inflation eases sharply to a fifteen-month low, although energy, metals and plastics are again quoted as driving up firms' costs overall.
- Falling new order volumes and the resulting drop in output impact on firms' purchasing and hiring decisions in August. Manufacturing employment decline for the third time in four months - and at the fastest pace in five years - while purchases of inputs fall at a survey-record rate.
COMMENTARY:
DEBBIE ORGILL, SENIOR ECONOMIST, ABN AMRO, LONDON
"The Czech manufacturing sector suffered further from slowing global demand and also the strong domestic currency during August."
"Although the currency has given up recent gains against the euro after the National Bank alluded to near-term interest rate cuts it is too early to see any benefits for the exporters. On the positive side price components continue to moderate and support the recent decision to lower official interest rates."
BACKGROUND: - Report on last Czech c.bank rate decision [
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] [ ] - June foreign trade figures......................[ ] - June industrial output...........................[ ] - Second-quarter GDP growth data................. [ ][
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