The health of the sector has now strengthened in 33 successive months.
The headline Nikkei Vietnam Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' index (PMI) posted 53.7 in August, signaling a further solid improvement in business conditions, according to Nikkei and HIS Markit.
The health of the sector has now strengthened in 33 successive months. That said, the latest reading was down from 54.9 in July and pointed to the weakest improvement in operating conditions in four months.
Vietnamese manufacturers continued to record growth of new orders during August. Although the rate of expansion eased, it remained sharp amid reports of improving client demand. New export orders also rose again over the month, but to a lesser extent than total new business. Meanwhile, backlogs of work decreased marginally for the third month running.
Continued strong growth of new orders resulted in a further monthly increase in manufacturing production. August's rise in output was solid, albeit the slowest since April.
A slowdown in employment growth was also registered, with the rate of job creation in August much weaker than June's record high. Where staffing levels increased, this was linked by panelists to rising workloads. Employment has risen continuously on a monthly basis for almost two-and-a-half years.
The rate of expansion in purchasing activity remained strong in August as firms responded to higher new orders and planned for future growth of production. Efforts to build inventories were generally successful. Stocks of purchases rose for the fifth month running, and at the fastest pace since February. Stocks of finished goods also increased, and for the second consecutive month.
Input prices continued to rise sharply, albeit at a reduced rate. Where input costs increased, this was linked to higher raw material prices and a depreciation of the Vietnamese dong against the US dollar. Rising input costs fed through to an increase in output prices. That said, the rate of inflation eased to a three-month low amid competitive pressures.
"Although seeing a slowdown in growth of output in August, the Vietnamese manufacturing sector appears to be on a sound footing at present thanks to an ability to continue to secure strong inflows of new work.
That said, business confidence dropped the lowest since the series began in early-2012, suggesting that concerns around global trade flows may start to impact Vietnamese firms over the coming months," said Andrew Harker, associate director at IHS Markit, which compiles the survey.
A reading below the 50 neutral mark indicates no change from the previous month, while a reading below 50 indicates contractions and above 50 points to an expansion.
The health of the sector has now strengthened in 33 successive months. That said, the latest reading was down from 54.9 in July and pointed to the weakest improvement in operating conditions in four months.
Vietnamese manufacturers continued to record growth of new orders during August. Although the rate of expansion eased, it remained sharp amid reports of improving client demand. New export orders also rose again over the month, but to a lesser extent than total new business. Meanwhile, backlogs of work decreased marginally for the third month running.
Continued strong growth of new orders resulted in a further monthly increase in manufacturing production. August's rise in output was solid, albeit the slowest since April.
A slowdown in employment growth was also registered, with the rate of job creation in August much weaker than June's record high. Where staffing levels increased, this was linked by panelists to rising workloads. Employment has risen continuously on a monthly basis for almost two-and-a-half years.
The rate of expansion in purchasing activity remained strong in August as firms responded to higher new orders and planned for future growth of production. Efforts to build inventories were generally successful. Stocks of purchases rose for the fifth month running, and at the fastest pace since February. Stocks of finished goods also increased, and for the second consecutive month.
Input prices continued to rise sharply, albeit at a reduced rate. Where input costs increased, this was linked to higher raw material prices and a depreciation of the Vietnamese dong against the US dollar. Rising input costs fed through to an increase in output prices. That said, the rate of inflation eased to a three-month low amid competitive pressures.
"Although seeing a slowdown in growth of output in August, the Vietnamese manufacturing sector appears to be on a sound footing at present thanks to an ability to continue to secure strong inflows of new work.
That said, business confidence dropped the lowest since the series began in early-2012, suggesting that concerns around global trade flows may start to impact Vietnamese firms over the coming months," said Andrew Harker, associate director at IHS Markit, which compiles the survey.
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