Site icon MONEYINAFRICA

Private Sector Warms Up to Relaxed Lockdown Measures

Private Sector Warms Up to Relaxed Lockdown Measures

The headline Stanbic Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) moved back above the 50.0 mark in August, posting 50.2 from 34.6 in July.

Readings above 50.0 signal an improvement in business conditions on the previous month, while readings below 50.0 show a deterioration.

The growth is attributed to the partial lifting of the 42-day COVID-19 lockdown in Uganda which helped spur a return to growth of both business activity and new orders in August, with companies confident of further growth over the coming year. Ronald Muyanja, the Head of Trading at Stanbic Bank Uganda said, “a return to growth in output and new orders recorded in August gives hope that as lockdown restrictions are eased further, that will spur growth in business activity in the coming months.”

Cautious Optimism

However, Muyanja calls for ‘cautious optimism’ noting that despite the growth seen in August, the PMI reading is still below the series’ average as businesses remain reluctant to raise staffing levels or input purchases.

“Notably, the employment sub-index is yet to recover,” Muyanja said.

The PMI notes that while demand is recovering, post the June lockdown, it remains weak, with little indication that capacity is under pressure. It is likely that stronger demand in coming months will also drive the recovery of the employment sub-index.

Despite the lifting of the lockdown and renewed increases in output and new orders, companies continued to lower their staffing levels, purchasing activity and inventory holdings during the month. There was little sign of capacity coming under pressure as backlogs of work fell again.

Focus on August

The August PMI report indicated a growth in both business activity and new orders following the loosening of some of the COVID-19 lockdown measures.

It was a refreshing development that will buoy the market through September, following two successive months in lockdown which had caused reductions in output and new business.A look at sectors showed that construction was the only one to remain in contraction territory, with growth recorded elsewhere.Output prices decreased for the third month running, although some companies raised charges in line with higher input costs, others lowered selling prices as demand remained relatively soft.The lifting of the lockdown is expected to lead to further growth in business activity over the coming year with more than 80% of respondents optimistic in the year ahead outlook.August also saw an overall rise in input prices following a reduction noted in July. This trend matched the picture seen for purchase costs […]

Stay in the Know!

Sign up for the latest news and information on African Companies and Economy.

By signing up, you agree to receive MoneyInAfrica offers, promotions and other commercial messages. You may unsubscribe at any time.
Exit mobile version