Japan PMI Manufacturing was finalized at 47.7 in February, down from January’s 48.9. That’s also the worst reading since September 2020. S&P Global also noted that backlogs of work decreased at quickest pace for 29 months. Input prices had the slowest rise for a year-and-a-half.
Usamah Bhatti, Economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence, said: “Latest data pointed to continually deteriorating activity in the Japanese manufacturing sector midway through the first quarter of 2023. Both new orders and production levels, which make up 55% of the headline PMI figure, fell at the fastest pace since July 2020 as weak domestic demand and a global economic slowdown hindered sales and output volumes.
“Moreover, the dip is likely to be sustained in the near-term as the absence of new orders amid dampened client confidence lifted capacity pressure on manufacturers further and led to the sharpest reduction in outstanding business in nearly two-and- a-half years.”