Showing posts with label Quarterly PMI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Quarterly PMI. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

8/4/15: Irish Quarterly PMIs: Services, Manufacturing & Construction


Given we now have data for PMIs for Ireland (via Markit and Investec) through March (see analysis of Manufacturing PMI here and Services PMI here), let's update quarterly PMI averages and compute my own 'composite' indicator based on 3 core sectors: Manufacturing, Construction and Services. Note: Construction sector PMIs are computed on the basis of january-February data as there are lags of 2 weeks in reporting these by Markit.

Manufacturing PMI for Q1 2015 stood at 56.5, down from 56.6 in Q4 2014. Thus, Q/Q the PMI is down 0.18%. In Q4 2014 Manufacturing PMI was up 0.77% Q/Q. So we have a slowdown in growth, but growth nonetheless.  The same holds for yearly comparatives. Q1 2015 was up 5.1% y/y, after posting 5.5% growth in Q4 2014 and 8.2% growth in Q3 2014. The series are trending above 50.0 for the 7th quarter in a row.

Services PMI fell from 61.9 in Q4 2014 to 61.6 in Q1 2015, down 0.5% Q/Q, having posted a decline of 0.3% q/q in Q4 2014. Yearly growth rates also slowed down: in Q3 2014 y/y growth in Services PMI was 5.8%, this fell to 3.7% in Q4 2014 and to 2.8% in Q1 2015. Still, we now have 17 consecutive quarters of growth in Services as recorded by PMIs in excess of 50.0.

Construction PMI (based on 2 months of data for 2015) is currently standing at 54.6, down from 63.8 in Q4 2014. This is a marked reversal in the q/q growth rates from 3.2% in Q4 2014 to -14.5% in Q1 2015, though we need to see March data to make any conclusions on this. Yearly growth rates are falling off the cliff too: in Q3 2014 Construction PMI rose 21.3% y/y, which declined to 8.5% growth in Q4 2014 and to estimated -5.3% contraction in Q1 2015. Again, as with Manufacturing, we do have continued 7 quarters of above 50 readings in the series, so the slowdown is in the rate of growth, not an outright contraction in activity.


As the chart above shows, Composite Index (computed by myself based on sectoral weights in the National Accounts) has posted a relatively sharp decline, driven primarily by the Construction PMI reading. As of today (absent March data for Construction PMI) the composite indicator is reading at 59.0, down from 60.7 in Q4 2014. This is the lowest reading in four quarters, so y/y the index is still up 1.4%, although the rate of growth in the index has fallen from 4.2% recorded in a year through Q4 2014 and 6.7% growth posted in Q3 2014. Nonetheless, the index continues to trend above 50 for the 17th quarter in a row.

Friday, October 3, 2014

3/10/2014: Ireland: Quarterly PMIs and Composite Activity Index: Q3 2014


As promised in the previous post, covering monthly Services PMI (http://trueeconomics.blogspot.ie/2014/10/3102014-services-pmi-for-ireland.html), here is my analysis of quarterly data and my own Composite Activity Index across manufacturing and services sectors, as well as construction sector.

All data reported is based on my calculations using Markit/Investec PMIs.

In Q3 2014, Manufacturing PMI averaged 56.1 which is up on 55.5 average for Q2 2014 and is up on Q3 2013 average of 51.9. Q3 2014 marks the 5th consecutive quarter of expansion in the series.

Services PMI stood at 62.1 in Q3 2014, unchanged from 62.1 in Q2 2014 and up on 58.7 Q3 2013 reading. This quarter marked 15th consecutive quarter of above 50 readings in PMI.

Construction PMI (data through August so far only) is at 62 in Q3 2014, up on 61.2 in Q2 2014 and 51.0 in Q3 2013. This marks 5th consecutive quarter of expansion in the sector.

Composite Activity Index is now at 60.35 in Q3 2014 ex-Construction, up on 60.16 in Q2 2014 and on 59.95 in Q3 2013. This is 18th consecutive quarter of composite indicator above 50.0. Including construction, Composite Activity Index is at 60.38, up on Q2 2014 reading of 60.18 and up on Q3 2013 reading of 56.81.

Chart to illustrate:

On a note of caution: showing just how weak the PMI indices are in predicting Irish growth, here are two charts plotting log changes in PMIs against log changes in GDP and GNP. In all cases, explanatory power of changes in PMIs is weak when it comes to matching the outcomes in growth in the real economy. The same qualitative results hold for levels of PMIs against log changes in GDP and GNP and to levels of PMIs against actual GDP and GNP levels.