Wk 41 Electronics Supply Chain Digest

Electronics Supply Chain Weekly Digest 10-06-23

DATAPOINTs OF THE WEEK:

S&P Global reported Sep Eurozone mfg PMI of 43.4 vs 43.5 in Aug and Germany PMI of 39.6 vs 39.1 in Aug both reflecting a high pace of new order declines and sustained reduction in employment, purchasing activity, and inventories. In the US. The ISM reported Sep mfg PMI of 49 vs 47.6 in Aug reflecting an expansion in output but a continued decline in new orders and inventory, albeit at a slower pace vs Aug.  S&P Global similarly reported an improvement in Sep mfg PMI to 49.8 from 47.9 in August but a continued decline in orders. In Japan, mfg PMI remained in contraction territory for the fourth straight month falling to 48.5in Sept from 49.6 in August reflecting steeper declines in output and new orders. In China government official mfg PMI increased to 50.2 in Sept from 49.7 in Aug, signaling expanding activity for the first time in six months. The private-based Caixin PMI declined in Sept to 50.6 from 51.0 in Aug but similarly signaled a slight improvement in operating conditions though the year ahead confidence was noted as remaining subdued which was reflected in a drop in employment.

S&P reported Global Electronics operating conditions continued to deteriorate in Sept with a PMI of 47.7, albeit at a slower pace compared to Aug’s 47.0 reading. S&P notes output continued to decline at a similar pace in Sep, marking a 13th consecutive month of declining output with all sub-sectors reporting declining production led by Computing. New orders also declined on the back of inventory destocking. Staffin levels also fell for the first time in 37 months, albeit only fractionally. S&P adds that in line with reduced new orders and production, global electronics manufacturers lowered their purchasing activity in September. The pace of contraction eased from August but remained marked overall.

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