Japan final manufacturing PMI for June 50.0 (prior 50.4)
Jibun S&P Global June 2024 Manufacturing PMI comes in at 50.0prior 50.4preliminary was 50.1From the commentary to the report:“Notably, the latest PMI data revealed the first rise in Japanese factory production for over a year, and a rebound in business confidence. Although employment continued to be impacted by retirements, there was another round of net job creation in June.“However, there were some concerning aspects in the latest figures, with companies grappling with heightened cost pressures as yen depreciation exacerbated the price of imported materials. Labour was another factor straining budgets. There was clear evidence that the sharp rise in overall purchasing prices was not caused by supply-chain issues, as delivery times in fact improved to the greatest extent in over 15 years. “Manufacturers raised their selling prices at the strongest rate in over a year as a result, an unfavourable consequence given that both domestic and external demand remain weak.” This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at www.forexlive.com.
Jibun S&P Global June 2024 Manufacturing PMI comes in at 50.0
- prior 50.4
- preliminary was 50.1
From the commentary to the report:
- “Notably, the latest PMI data revealed the first rise in Japanese factory production for over a year, and a rebound in business confidence. Although employment continued to be impacted by retirements, there was another round of net job creation in June.
- “However, there were some concerning aspects in the latest figures, with companies grappling with heightened cost pressures as yen depreciation exacerbated the price of imported materials. Labour was another factor straining budgets. There was clear evidence that the sharp rise in overall purchasing prices was not caused by supply-chain issues, as delivery times in fact improved to the greatest extent in over 15 years.
- “Manufacturers raised their selling prices at the strongest rate in over a year as a result, an unfavourable consequence given that both domestic and external demand remain weak.”