The final Royal Bank of Scotland/NTC Eurozone Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index – a composite indicator designed to provide a single-figure summary of business conditions – registered 52.3 in February. The PMI was in line with the flash reading and down from 52.8 in January, therefore signaling a slight easing in the rate of improvement to the second-weakest over the past 2.5 years. PMI readings among the big-four euro nations showed the widest variation for 7.5 years, with continued solid growth in Germany and, to a lesser extent, France contrasting with near-stagnation in Italy and an accelerating rate of contraction in Spain. The PMI for
Output: Strong growth in
Output growth slowed in February, but to a slightly lesser extent than indicated by the earlier flash estimate. Although well down on the strong rate of increase seen prior to last autumn’s slowdown, the survey data indicate that production continued to expand at a moderate pace. However, of the big-four countries, only
Orders show modest growth
Growth of new orders was slightly weaker than in January (though above the flash estimate), therefore continuing to run well below the buoyant pace seen last summer. The latest increase was only very modest and the second-weakest recorded over the past 32 months. Of the big-four countries, only
Growth of new export orders* also slowed closer toward stagnation in February (though increased by slightly more than indicated by the flash estimate), rising at the weakest pace for 33 months. Both
Prices: Input price inflation moves higher
Input price inflation accelerated a little more than estimated by the flash release, picking up for the second successive month to reach a seven-month high. High oil, energy and food prices in particular continued to be widely reported. Rates of input price inflation rose in all big-four countries, especially in
Output price inflation at 11-month high
The rate of increase in average factory gate (output) prices accelerated a little faster than initially indicated by the flash release, rising to an 11-month high and, therefore, continuing to run well above the survey’s long-run average. All the big-four countries saw an increase in the rate of output price inflation, except
Employment: Buoyant job creation in Germany
Employment growth was very marginally weaker than estimated by the flash release for February, therefore slipping fractionally on January’s rate of expansion but remaining similar to those seen over the previous six months. Looking at the big-four,
Commenting on the Eurozone Manufacturing PMI survey data, produced for The Royal Bank of Scotland by NTC Economics, RBS chief euro area economist Jacques Cailloux said: “The final PMI data for February signaled the resumption of slower activity in the Eurozone manufacturing sector due to the combined headwinds of slower economic growth in export markets, the strong euro and high commodity prices. The rate of expansion is consistent with an easing in growth of manufacturing production from a peak of 6.1 percent per annum last year to below 1 percent in February, as these pressures on growth begin to take hold. Most worrying is the dismal performance of
* The Eurozone New Export Orders Index includes intra-Eurozone trade.