Tag: PMI report

  • PMI report: private sector expands on consumer demand surge

    PMI report: private sector expands on consumer demand surge

    The Nigerian private sector remained in growth territory at the end of 2025 as improvements in customer demand fed through to higher new orders, output and purchasing activity, the Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) has shown.

    The report released yesterday showed that employment also increased, but the rate of job creation remained marginal. Inflationary pressures picked up modestly in December but remained generally close to recent lows. Meanwhile, business confidence improved sharply.

    “The headline figure derived from the survey is the Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI). Readings above 50.0 signal an improvement in business conditions on the previous month, while readings below 50.0 show a deterioration,” it said.

    It said the headline PMI posted 53.5 in December, little-changed from 53.6 in November and signaling a solid monthly improvement in business conditions as 2025 drew to a close. The latest strengthening in operating conditions was the thirteenth in as many months, and broadly in line with the average for 2025 as a whole.

    It said growth in December emanated from an improvement in customer demand which supported a marked monthly increase in new orders. The rise in sales was the fourteenth in as many months and only slightly weaker than in November.

    In turn, companies expanded output sharply, with the pace of growth broadly in line with that seen in November. All four broad categories saw output rise, led by agriculture.

    “Stronger customer demand also encouraged firms to expand their purchasing activity and inventory holdings. Employment was also up, but only marginally and at the slowest pace since June 2025,” the report said.

    The report explained that for the second month running, companies noted a slight rise in backlogs of work. Delays completing projects were reportedly caused by material shortages and power supply issues. Meanwhile, suppliers’ delivery times shortened but to the least extent in six months amid reports of poor road conditions.

    “Those firms that registered shorter lead times linked this to prompt payments and a lack of traffic. Higher raw material prices led to a marked rise in purchase costs. The pace of inflation quickened but remained among the weakest in the past six years. Staff costs also increased at a faster pace as firms paid employees for additional work,” it said.

    Read Also: 974 Nigerians await deportation from Canada

    Also, companies responded to higher input costs by raising their own selling prices in December.

    “Here too the pace of inflation quickened, but was only slightly stronger than the recent low posted in November. Manufacturing registered the sharpest rise in charges of the four monitored categories. Nigerian private-sector firms were much more confident in the outlook for business activity at the end of 2025,” it said.

    Muyiwa Oni, Head of Equity Research West Africa at Stanbic IBTC Bank commented: “Headline PMI (53.5 vs November: 53.6) moderated for the second consecutive month in December, although still in the growth territory and the latest reading is broadly in line with the average for 2025 as a whole. The continued expansion in business activity in December, albeit slightly softer than November, reflects higher customer demand, which supported a marked monthly increase in new orders. This in turn encouraged companies to expand their purchasing activity and inventory holdings.

    “Meanwhile, there was a marked improvement in business confidence among the companies as sentiment hit a six-month high, linked to planned investments in business expansions, including opening of new branches and plans to boost products exports,” he said.

  • PMI report: purchase costs, output prices surge over currency weakness

    PMI report: purchase costs, output prices surge over currency weakness

    The impact of currency weakness on the Nigerian private sector was evident again in March, with the purchase costs rose at the sharpest rate on record, meaning companies increased their own selling prices at an unprecedented pace, Purchasing Managers’ Index report  for March has shown.

    The highlights of the report shared by Stanbic IBTC indicated that  the rate  of expansion in business activity ticked higher, but steep price rises acted to limit demand and the pace of new order growth eased to a four-month low. Meanwhile, employment decreased for the second month running.

    The headline figure derived from the survey is the PMI readings above 50.0 signal an improvement in business conditions on the previous month, while readings below 50.0 show a deterioration.

    The headline PMI was unchanged at 51.0 in March, the joint-lowest in four months. The latest reading pointed to a slight improvement in business conditions during the month, and one that was softer than the series trend.

    Price pressures remained elevated in March. In fact, the rate of purchase price inflation hit a fresh record high for the second consecutive month, largely due to the impact of currency weakness. There were also some reports of higher transportation costs. Employee pay was also increased in response to cost-of-living pressures, resulting in the sharpest rise in staff costs since last November.

    Read Also: PMI report: Business activities dip on cash shortage

    In line with the picture for purchase costs, the rate of output price inflation was also the steepest since the series began in January 2014 as close to 69% of respondents increased their charges over the month.

    With prices rising sharply, firms faced challenges securing new orders. Although new business increased for the fourth month running as some companies noted greater client interest, the rate of expansion was the softest in the current sequence of growth.

    While output and new orders continued to rise, employee resignations caused staffing levels to decrease marginally for the second month running. Purchasing activity returned to growth, however, following a reduction in the previous survey period. Where input buying increased, this was linked to efforts to meet new order requirements in a timely manner. This was also a factor behind sustained growth of inventories.