New order growth hits two-year high in December

December data highlighted a positive end to 2016 for the Canadian manufacturing sector, led by the fastest upturn in incoming new work for two years, according to IHS Markit Canada. The latest survey also pointed to the strongest pace of production growth since July and a sustained rise in payroll numbers. However, input cost inflation accelerated for the third month running, driven by higher prices for imported materials, especially metals. Pressure on operating margins resulted in the steepest rise in factory gate prices since May 2014.

At 51.8 in December, up from 51.5 in November, the seasonally adjusted Markit Canada Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index™ (PMI™) signalled a modest improvement in overall business conditions across the manufacturing sector. The latest reading was the strongest since July and well above the survey-record low seen at the same time in 2015 (47.5). Stronger business conditions largely reflected a sustained rebound in new order growth in December, alongside rising production volumes and continued job creation among manufacturing firms.

Output growth picked up to a five-month high in December, which survey respondents mainly linked to improving demand conditions. Reflecting this, new business levels rose at the steepest pace for two years, with manufacturers commenting on greater spending among clients in the energy and automotive sectors. Export sales increased only marginally, although the upward trend in December signalled a continued rebound from the declines seen during the third quarter of 2016.

Canadian manufacturers reported another increase in their staffing levels during December, which extended the current period of growth to three successive months. Additional staff recruitment was driven by rising production schedules, which in turn contributed to a further slight reduction in backlogs of work at the end of 2016.

Post-production inventories decreased in December, which continued the downward trend seen in each month since April. Some firms noted that stronger-than-expected sales growth had led to lower warehouse stocks of finished goods at the end of 2016. Pre-production inventories were also depleted across the manufacturing sector, although the rate of decline was only marginal. Meanwhile, manufacturers reported longer delivery times from suppliers in December, which some attributed to rail freight delays.

Input cost inflation reached its strongest for almost two-and-a-half years in December, which manufacturers linked to exchange rate factors and rising commodity prices in general. Mirroring the upward trend for operating costs, latest data signalled the steepest rise in output charges since May 2014.

Regional highlights:

- Alberta & B.C. recorded the fastest rise in new orders since November 2013

- Manufacturers in Quebec reported a sustained fall in output, led by weaker export sales

- For the first time since February 2015, all regions posted a rise in factory gate prices

“Canada’s manufacturing sector ended the year on a much stronger footing than it started, with production volumes and new orders both returning growth territory,” said Tim Moore, senior economist at survey compilers HIS Markit. “Survey respondents attributed the latest improvement in manufacturing sales to greater demand from domestic clients, especially those in the energy and automotive sectors.

“December data pointed to widening provincial disparities in growth momentum. A steeper rebound in manufacturing output across Alberta & B.C. contrasted with relatively subdued growth patterns elsewhere, most notably an export-led slowdown in Quebec.”

“Stronger new business growth and a rebound in energy sector spending underpinned the improved performance of Canada’s manufacturing sector at the end of 2016,” said Mike Whelan, chair of the SCMA National Board. “The latest upturn in new orders was the fastest in two years, despite a relatively subdued contribution from export sales. Moreover, the combination of increasing orders and depleted inventories in December bodes well for output growth heading into 2017.

“However, manufacturers continue to face longer delivery times and higher prices for raw materials, with input cost inflation now close to a two-and-a-half year peak.

“December’s survey reveals that Western Canada is driving the current upturn in manufacturing conditions. Production growth across Alberta & B.C. hit a two-year high in December, helped by the largest rise in incoming new orders since late 2013.”