Asia factories falter amid virus spread

Bloomberg

Asian manufacturing gauges stumbled in January, suggesting the US-China trade agreement failed to spur sentiment for an industry now bracing for supply-chain disruptions and a blow to demand from the spread of the coronavirus.
South Korea’s purchasing manager index — often viewed as a key barometer of global demand — fell to 49.8 from 50.1 in December. Malaysia’s reading slipped to 48.8 from 50 while Thailand also returned to negative territory.
Vietnam, whose economy has been a rare winner from the trade tensions as supply chains shifted in its favor, saw its PMI slip to 50.6 from 50.8, data from IHS Markit showed on Monday.
The China Caixin Media and IHS Markit PMI manufacturing index fell to 51.1 from 51.5. Data showed the official PMI dropped to 50 in January, underscoring how the nation’s factories were struggling even before the country shut down for the Lunar New Year holidays and the coronavirus outbreak worsened.
India saw its gauge rise to the highest since at least 2017 at 55.3 from 52.7. The Jibun Bank PMI gauge for Japan was 48.8.

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