MANUFACTURING ACTIVITY DECLINES FOR THE MONTH OF APRIL 2003
The ANZ-Business NZ Performance of Manufacturing Index (ANZ-Business NZ PMI) is a monthly survey of the manufacturing
sector providing an early indicator of activity levels. The ANZBusiness NZ PMI contains data obtained through Business
NZ’s regional organisations:
Employers’ & Manufacturers’ Association (Northern), Employers’ & Manufacturers’ Association (Central), Canterbury Employers’ Chamber of Commerce, Canterbury Manufacturers’ Association
and Otago Southland Employers’ Association. When interpreting the data, a PMI reading above 50 points indicates
manufacturing is generally expanding; below 50 indicates it is contracting; the distance from 50 indicates the strength
of expansion or contraction.
KEY FINDINGS
The ANZ-Business NZ Performance of Manufacturing Index was 49.3 for the month of April.
This was down 3.4 points from March and is the first time since the survey began in August 2002 that the PMI has fallen
below 50 to indicate a general contraction in activity, albeit at a modest level.
Three of the five component indexes recorded contraction during April, with Production having the lowest value (48.0),
followed by Deliveries (48.7) and Employment (49.1).
Finished Stocks recorded no change (50.0). There was some encouragement with the forward-looking New Orders index
recording expansion, although at a very modest level (50.7). With the exception of New Orders and Finished Stocks, all
other component indexes recorded their lowest values over the nine months of the index.
The food, beverage & tobacco sector recorded the strongest level of expansion (54.0), followed closely by the petroleum, coal, chemical & associated product sector (53.9). In contrast, the wood & paper product sector had the largest decline (38.1).
Three of the four regions recorded contraction in the month of April. The Otago/Southland region (43.9) continued to
trend downwards, while the Northern region (48.7) and Central region (49.7) also recorded a decline. The
Canterbury/Westland region showed expansion (53.5), and had the highest regional value for the second consecutive month.
Small-Medium sized firms (11-50 workers) were the only firms to show expansion during April (51.7), while all other
firms by size recorded a decline.
The New Zealand dollar’s continued gains against the American dollar and recent high levels against the Australian
dollar were viewed as the largest obstacle to increased business activity by firms over the last three months, followed
by SARS. Both SARS and the high value of the New Zealand dollar were blamed for reducing export earnings. Some said
uncertainty over issues abroad was clouding future planning; others mentioned current and upcoming legislative changes
by the Government that directly affect employers.
PRODUCTION
The ANZ-Business NZ Production diffusion index was 48.0 for April, a fall of 4.4 points from March and the lowest
component index value for the month. It is also the first time the component index has shown a decline.
Two of the five manufacturing sectors recorded expansion for April, with the petroleum, coal, chemical & associated product sector (58.8) having the strongest expansion, followed by the food, beverage & tobacco sector (57.4).
The Canterbury/Westland region continued to record the highest Production index value (51.6), and was the only region
to record expansion. The Otago/Southland region slipped a further 2.1 points to stand at 40.0, the lowest production
level for any region.
EMPLOYMENT
The ANZ-Business NZ Employment diffusion index fell 2.6 points from March to 49.1 for April. This is its lowest value
recorded and is the second time it has shown a contraction.
The food, beverage & tobacco sector had the highest level of expansion (57.4), followed by the petroleum, coal, chemical & associated product sector (52.5) and the metal product sector (52.0). The remaining two sectors showed contraction,
most notably the wood & paper product sector (30.6).
The Canterbury/Westland region continues to point to higher levels of employment, with the April value being the
highest ever for the region (56.3). Employment in the Central region was largely unchanged (50.6), while both the
Northern and Otago/Southland regions recorded declines (45.7 and 47.5 respectively).
NEW ORDERS
It is encouraging that the forward-looking ANZ-Business NZ New Orders diffusion index continued to record expansion
during April (50.7). While not as strong as the previous two months’, it has managed to maintain a value above 50
throughout the year to date.
The food, beverage & tobacco sector (59.3) and the machinery & equipment sector (57.4) recorded strong expansion for April. The petroleum, coal, chemical & associated products sector also showed expansion, while two experienced a decline.
An index value of 55.0 for new orders in Otago/Southland stands in contrast to weakness in other indexes for the
region, and points to an upturn in activity if they materialise. The Canterbury/Westland region (53.1) and the Northern
region (51.1) also recorded expansion.
FINISHED STOCKS
The ANZ-Business NZ Finished Stocks diffusion index fell 1.7 points from March to record 50.0 for April, indicating
little change in stock levels.
Only two sectors recorded expansion in finished stocks during April, with the machinery & equipments sector having the highest value (55.9). The food, beverage & tobacco sector recorded the lowest value (37.0).
The Otago/Southland region recorded another sharp fall for finished stocks, decreasing 12.1 points from March to reach
30.0 for April. Both the Central and Canterbury/Westland regions recorded expansion (53.6 and 54.7 respectively), while
the Northern region showed modest decline (49.5).
DELIVERIES
The ANZ-Business NZ Deliveries of Raw Materials diffusion index fell 2.7 points from March to reach 48.7 for April, the
first time the component index has recorded a contraction.
The petroleum, coal, chemical & associated product sector was the only manufacturing industry to show expansion (56.3). The metal product sector
recorded stable raw material deliveries during April (50.0), while all other sectors showed a decline.
Delivery levels for the Canterbury/Westland region fell back to February’s levels, falling 9.4 points to stand at 53.1.
The Central region was the only other region to record expansion (50.6), while both the Northern and Otago/Southland
regions experienced a decline (48.9 and 32.5 respectively).
*Regions (grouped according to Business NZ’s associated regional organisations)
Northern (EMA Northern): Northland, Auckland, Waikato, Bay of Plenty
Central (EMA Central): Gisborne, Hawke’s Bay, Taranaki, Manawatu, Wanganui, Wellington, Nelson, Tasman
Canterbury/Westland (CMA and CECC): Canterbury, Marlborough, West Coast
Otago/Southland (OSEA): Otago, Southland
Next ANZ-Business NZ PMI (May results): 27 June 2003