India's Factory Activity Grows At Fastest Pace In 3 Months In May: Survey

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
to a private business survey which also showed a pick up in hiring.The survey found increased optimism about manufacturing activity over the
coming year, probably helped as Prime Minister Narendra Modi scored a dramatic election victory on a mandate of business-friendly policies
and a tough stand on national security.Almost 70 per cent of responses were collected after exit polls showed PM Modi's Bharatiya Janata
Party would return to power for a second term.The Nikkei Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index increased to 52.7 in May from April's
eight-month low of 51.8, remaining above the 50-mark threshold that separates growth from contraction for a 22nd straight month."A revival
in new order growth promoted a faster upturn in manufacturing production, as Indian firms sought to replenish inventories utilised in May to
fulfill strengthening demand," Pollyanna De Lima, principal economist at IHS Markit, said in a release.The new business orders sub-index,
which tracks overall demand, rose as foreign demand increased at the fastest pace in three months
Output also grew at the strongest rate since February.That led firms to increase the pace of hiring from the previous month when headcount
was barely changed."To assist with higher output needs, and benefit from relatively muted cost inflation, companies stepped up hiring and
input purchasing," Ms De Lima said."Goods producers were also able to charge competitive prices due to negligible increases in their cost
burdens, meaning not only higher sales in the domestic market, but also greater overseas demand."Although input costs increased at a
stronger pace in May, manufacturers did not pass on those pressures to customers and instead trimmed prices for the first time since
December
The output prices sub index dropped to 49.9 from 50.8.That will help keep retail inflation muted and well below the Reserve Bank of India's
4 per cent target, increasing the likelihood of an interest rate cut at the next policy review on June 6.If the central bank cuts rates
this week, as expected, it would mark the third consecutive easing in as many meetings.