Thailand’s S&P Global manufacturing PMI for March fell to 49.9 from 50.6 signalling no growth in activity at the end of Q1. The index has oscillated around the breakeven-50 mark for six months now. Most Asian PMIs released today were lower in March likely impacted by global demand fears related to the introduction of US tariffs and the associated uncertainty. The rest of ASEAN plus the aggregate print on Wednesday.
- Thailand averaged a PMI of 50.0 in Q1 signalling that the manufacturing sector moved sideways after slight growth in Q4 with a PMI of 50.5.
- The drop in the March PMI was driven by new orders which resulted in the fastest job shedding in a year but it remained marginal. Orders fell for the third consecutive month with external demand weak. Export orders contracted at their sharpest for three months but they have been negative for 18 months now.
- Soft demand meant that some businesses worked through backlogs but they reduced purchasing and thus stock levels.
- There was a slight fall in costs in March which with weak demand resulted in lower selling prices for the fourth straight month.
- Manufacturers still view the outlook as positive driven by new products coming online. Business confidence remains above its historical average but fell to a 3-month trough.
- The Bank of Thailand’s March business confidence is released later today.
Thailand business surveys
Source: MNI - Market News/Refinitiv/Bloomberg