Factory output expands as firms stockpile buffers over Iran war risks


Garment workers at a factory in Phnom Penh. Most of the raw materials used in the garment sector are imported from China. - Photo: STPM

TOKYO: Asia’s factory activity is expanding steadily on stockpiling by some companies to get ahead of supply shocks from the Middle East conflict, private surveys show, a sign that the war’s economic fallout is broadening across the region.

The surveys came after the heads of the International Energy Agency, International Monetary Fund, World Bank and World Trade Organisation warned the war in the Middle East was straining global energy supplies and hitting vulnerable economies hardest.

Factory activity expanded in most Asian economies.

China’s private sector gauge grew for a sixth straight month and South Korea’s hit the fastest pace in five years, highlighting a region-wide push to build buffers against potential conflict-led disruptions.

The RatingDog China general manufacturing purchasing managers’ index (PMI), compiled by S&P Global, fell to 51.8 in May from 52.2 in April, but was slightly better than analysts’ forecast of 51.6 and above the 50 level that signals expansion from contraction.

The outcome contrasted with an official survey showing factory activity in the world’s second-largest economy stalled last month as new orders contracted and input costs kept rising.

Japan’s factory activity also expanded with the PMI at 54.5 in May, slowing from April’s more than four-year high of 55.1, though firms there reported the sharpest rise in input costs since September 2022 due to higher raw material prices driven by the Middle East war.

“The current period of expansion is being partly driven by stock building among manufacturers and their clients, as companies looked to safeguard against product shortages and mitigate price risks driven by the war in the Middle East,” said Annabel Fiddes, associate director of economics at S&P Global.

South Korea’s PMI rose to its highest since March 2021 at 54.8 in May, up from 53.6 in April, again underlining firms’ drive to lock in supplies as shipping disruptions tied to the Iran war jolt global trade.

The United States-Israeli war on Iran has upended trade, rattled financial markets and raised concerns over global energy supplies, particularly through the Strait of Hormuz, a key route for oil and gas shipments. — Reuters

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