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home / news releases / KEJI - Worldwide Producer Prices Rise In August For First Time In Four Months


KEJI - Worldwide Producer Prices Rise In August For First Time In Four Months

2023-09-02 09:30:00 ET

Summary

  • Average prices charged by factories for their goods edged higher for the first time in four month during August.
  • Data hints that the recent deflationary impact of falling price pressures in the manufacturing sector may have peaked.
  • The deflationary impact from the goods-producing sector is showing some signs of having peaked.

Average prices charged by factories for their goods edged higher for the first time in four month during August, according to the JPMorgan Global Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index™ (PMI™) compiled by S&P Global. Companies reported sustained upward pressure from wages alongside reviving upward pressure on prices from energy and raw material costs.

The data hints that the recent deflationary impact of falling price pressures in the manufacturing sector may have peaked.

Factories raise prices for first time in four months

Manufacturing output prices - average charges levied for goods leaving the factory gate - edged higher worldwide in August, according to the latest PMI surveys compiled by S&P Global, returning to growth after three months of decline.

Although only marginal, and in marked contrast to the record increases in factory selling prices just over a year ago, the rise in goods prices is significant in signaling a potential turning point in the deflationary cycle which has helped cool global consumer price inflation over the past year.

While Japan saw a particularly steep increase in prices relative to the other major economies, the rise was the smallest for two years. However, the rate of inflation rose to a four-month high in the US and also hit a five-month high in Canada. While prices continued to fall in the eurozone and in mainland China, rates of decline moderated in both cases. Prices meanwhile fell at an increased rate in the UK, but the decline was only very modest.

Higher prices charged were largely a symptom of producers passing cost increases on to customers. Average factory input costs likewise rose for the first time in four months in August.

In a similar pattern to selling prices, only the UK saw an increased rate of decline of input prices of the major economies. Costs rose at increased rates in Japan and the US and returned to growth in the mainland China.

Higher costs

Looking at the causes of higher output prices, rising wage costs were cited as the most common factor again in August, although to a reduced level compared to July. Upward pressure from rising energy costs meanwhile increased for the first time in 11 months to the highest since March. Upward pressure from rising raw material costs also edged up, climbing for a second successive month to hit the highest since February.

Only demand continued to exert further downward pressure on prices.

The deflationary impact of falling demand was underscored in August by new orders for goods reportedly dropping for the fourteenth successive month.

However, the supply situation is showing some signs of changing. Although average suppliers' delivery times continued to improve globally for a seventh successive month in August, the improvement was the smallest recorded since February. Despite the August survey seeing a further fall in the number of companies reporting items to have been in short supply, the change in the suppliers' delivery times index signals some tentative firming of pricing power among raw material suppliers.

Bottom line

While the bottom line from the PMIs is that manufacturing prices are likely to remain less of a concern to policymakers in the fight against inflation than service sector prices, the deflationary impact from the goods-producing sector is showing some signs of having peaked. Tentative signs of rising goods prices could therefore add to some stickiness of inflation around the world in the coming months barring a further downturn in demand.


Original Post

Editor's Note: The summary bullets for this article were chosen by Seeking Alpha editors.

For further details see:

Worldwide Producer Prices Rise In August For First Time In Four Months
Stock Information

Company Name: Global X China Disruption ETF
Stock Symbol: KEJI
Market: NASDAQ

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