Asia’s factories suffer major blow as tariffs dampen demand


The latest data shows the extent of the fallout after Mr Trump imposed the steepest US duties in more than a century. - Photo: The Straits Times/ANN

HANOI/BANGKOK (Bloomberg): Manufacturing activity across most of Asia contracted in April, with companies struggling with weaker demand and pausing new orders in the face of US President Donald Trump’s baseline 10% tariff.

Purchasing managers indexes for the region’s factory giants, including South Korea and Taiwan, slipped sharply last month as the global trade uncertainty led to declines in new orders and cutbacks in production, surveys published by S&P Global showed on Friday. India was an outlier, showing an expansion in activity.

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
Asia , Factories , Activities , Output , Tough Times

Next In Aseanplus News

Hong Kong authorities offer support to family of man found dead in Taipei hotel
Motor racing-Honda battery issue adds to Aston Martin's testing woes
Eight feared dead after a bus with Chinese tourists sinks into Russia's Lake Baikal
Outspoken Laos lawmaker's election exit sparks rare dissent
Norway moves some of its 60 soldiers in Middle East due to security situation
22,000 Singapore civil servants to get up to nine per cent pay rise from Aug 1
Chinese military urged to overhaul English teaching to improve language skills
Ringgit closes higher against greenback on cautious market sentiment
Malaysia looks forward to close cooperation with new Bangladesh leadership, says Anwar
Russia says no peace dialogue ongoing with Japan over territorial dispute

Others Also Read