Record Fall in Employment as Activity Continues to Decline – Report

Stanbic IBTC Bank Nigeria PMI: New order Growth Quickens To 17-month High In June

The Nigerian private sector has remained in decline at the end of the second quarter of the year, with the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and associated restrictions to prevent its spread continuing to impact operations. That said, a loosening of the lockdown led to softer declines in output and new orders. On the other hand, difficulties in paying staff led to a record fall in employment, while business confidence was the lowest in the survey so far.

Firms also had to contend with a substantial increase in purchase costs, which resulted in a near-record rise in selling prices.

The  headline  figure  derived  from  the  survey  is  the Purchasing Managers’ Index™ (PMI®), a property of Stanbic IBTC Bank PLC. Readings above

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

The headline PMI rose to 46.4 in June, up from 40.7 in May to signal a softer deterioration in business conditions in the private sector. That said, operating conditions have now worsened in three consecutive months.

Both output and new orders continued to fall, albeit at reduced rates. Restrictions to prevent the spread of COVID-19, a lack of customers and insufficient funds to commit to new orders were all mentioned by respondents. New export orders also fell, and to a greater extent than total new business.

Difficulties in paying staff led to a third successive fall in employment. Moreover, the rate of job cuts was the fastest since the survey began in January 2014. A combination of pay cuts and job losses resulted in a decline in staff costs, also the sharpest on record.

In contrast to falling staff costs, purchase prices continued to increase substantially, with the rate of inflation hitting a new record for the third month running. Raw material shortages and currency weakness were reportedly behind the latest rise in purchase prices.

The strong increase in purchase costs fed through to a steep rise in selling prices, with the rate of inflation little- changed from the record posted in May.

The prospect of further price rises led some firms to purchase inputs in June to guard against this.  Both input  buying  and  stocks  of  purchases  decreased only marginally. Meanwhile, suppliers’ delivery times shortened to the greatest extent in three months amid competitive pressures and a lack of capacity pressure at vendors.

The impact of COVID-19 led to a marked drop in confidence regarding the 12-month outlook for business activity. In fact, sentiment was the lowest in the survey’s six-and-a-half year history.