Sunday, March 9, 2025
28.2 C
Lagos

Stanbic IBTC Bank PMI: Output Falls at Fastest Pace in 19 Months amid Intense Cost Pressures

Severe inflationary pressures caused an intensification of the downturn in the Nigerian private sector at the start of the final quarter of the year. Overall input costs rose at one of the sharpest rates on record, with selling prices increased accordingly.

This resulted in marked reductions in new orders and business activity, while business sentiment was the lowest in the survey’s history. More positively, firms increased their staffing levels marginally despite the drop in workloads.

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.

Muyiwa Oni, Head of Equity Research West Africa at Stanbic IBTC Bank commented: “Nigeria’s private sector activity worsened further in October, with the headline PMI settling at a 19-month low of 46.9 points from 49.8 in September.

The notable reason for this worsening business environment in October was an intensification of already strong inflationary pressures, reflecting currency weakness and higher prices for fuel and transportation.

Consequently, there was a marked reduction in new orders and business activity, while business sentiment was the lowest since the survey began in January 2014. Three of the four monitored sectors saw output fall, with only the agriculture sector bucking the wider trend to record a rise in output.

Despite a sharp fall in new orders during October, Nigerian companies continued to increase their staffing levels slightly, thereby extending the current sequence of job creation to six months.

The downturn in the business environment worsened at the start of Q4:24, still reflecting the impact of price pressures on consumer demand and business investments. Currency pressures and high interest rates are further intensifying the lingering pressure on the private sector.

This continues to imply that the non-oil sector’s growth will remain weak, although improved crude oil production relative to the prior year may compensate for this lacklustre non-oil sector’s performance.”

The headline PMI dropped to 46.9 in October from 49.8 in September, and signalled a marked deterioration in business conditions that was the most pronounced since March 2023. Central to the worsening business environment in October was an intensification of already-strong inflationary pressures. Overall input prices surged higher, with the latest rise the third-fastest in the survey’s history. A steep increase in purchase costs reflected currency weakness and higher prices for fuel and transportation.

Meanwhile, efforts to help workers with rising living costs meant that staff pay was increased to the greatest extent in seven months. Faced with sharply rising input costs, Nigerian companies increased their own selling prices rapidly too.

The rate of charge inflation was the fastest since March and fourth-strongest on record. Steep price rises had a severe impact on customer demand, and new orders declined for the first time in three months. Moreover, the rate of contraction was the sharpest since March 2023.

Business activity also decreased to the largest extent in 19 months, with only the agriculture sector bucking the wider trend to record a rise in output. Sharp falls in output and new orders dented business confidence in October, with sentiment falling to the lowest on record.

Companies continued to increase their staffing levels, however, raising employment for the sixth month running, albeit modestly. Some firms took on staff on a short-term basis to make sure work was finished on time, but others reduced workforce numbers amid cost pressures.

Price pressures meanwhile contributed to a reduction in purchasing activity, with firms scaling back their input buying in response to falling client demand.

The marked fall in purchasing was the most pronounced since March 2023. In turn, stocks of inputs also decreased, and for the third month running.

Finally, weak demand for inputs, competition among suppliers and prompt payments meant that lead times on the delivery of inputs continued to shorten.

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

NCDMB ES Seeks Africa-wide Local Content Framework to Leverage Collective Strengths for Mutual Prosperity

The Executive Secretary of the Nigerian Content Development and...

Stanbic IBTC Bank’s Gas, Infrastructure Confab Charts Path for Economic Growth

L-R: Umah Imoh, Acting Sector Head, Energy, Client Coverage,...

Union Bank Rewards 452 Customers in UnionKorrect Draws 

Union Bank of Nigeria recently rewarded 452 UnionKorrect account...

Stanbic IBTC Pension Managers Unveils Innovative Self-service Options to Enhance Client Experience

In a significant move to streamline pension management and...

Leadway Group Sponsors +234Art Fair for Second-Year Running

Leadway Group, one of Nigeria's foremost non-banking financial services...

Topics

VBank Leads Discourse on Innovative Payment Systems at 2021 Nigeria Fintech Week

L-R (Mudiaga Umukoro, CEO Appzone Core; Akeem Lawal, Divisional...

Why Celestine Omehia Deserves No Pity

By Haniel Ukpaukure Did he not see it coming? I’d...

Polaris Bank Empowers Media Practitioners with 2024 Capacity Building Workshop

As part of its on-going commitment to continually empower...

First Bank Deepens Financial Inclusion via Agent Banking Network, Empowers SMEs

Adesola Adeduntan CEO First Bank At present, there are over 86,000...

ITU: COVID-19 Pandemic Worsens Global Digital Divide

More than a year and a half into the...

Coping in Nigeria’s High-Inflation Economy

 By Elvis Eromosele Economists say inflation is a persistent rise...

Halilu’s Next One Year in Office: NASENI to Upscale Commercialisation of Technologies, Products

By Chinyere Obiora-Ekwuazi, Henry Ukwadia, Hadiza Abdul Abubakar The National...

GE Partners African Leadership Varsity to Empower African Professionals with Digital Skills

·         This paradigm shift in industrial thinking will allow...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img