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The end of the third quarter of 2022 saw growth gather momentum in the Nigerian private sector. Sharper rises in output and new orders were recorded, while there were emerging signs of capacity pressures. Cost inflation remained elevated, in large part due to currency weakness, while business confidence waned.
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.
The
headline PMI rose to 53.7 in September, up from 52.3 in August and signaling a
solid strengthening in the health of the private sector at the end of the third
quarter. The improvement in business conditions was the most marked since May.
In
line with the headline figure, both output and new orders increased at sharper
rates during the month. Firms often linked higher new business to rising
demand, with some reporting that customer referrals had supported growth. In
turn, output rose for the third month running, and at the fastest pace since
April.
Rising
new orders, and some reports of difficulties securing necessary funding,
resulted in a renewed increase in backlogs of work during September, the first
in 28 months.
Companies
also increased their staffing levels and purchasing activity, largely in
response to greater new business volumes. In both cases, however, rates of
expansion eased from the previous survey period. Higher purchasing activity fed
through to a further accumulation of inventories.
Purchase
costs rose sharply, with anecdotal evidence often linking higher prices to
currency depreciation. Meanwhile, staff costs increased at the fastest pace in
three months. Panelists reported that efforts to motivate staff and help them
with higher living costs had been behind salary increases.
With
overall input costs again rising at one of the sharpest rates since the survey
began, Nigerian companies increased their selling prices accordingly. Although
marked, the rate of charge inflation slowed sharply and was the joint-weakest
in 21 months. Suppliers' delivery times continued to shorten, often as a result
of strong competition among vendors. The latest shortening of lead times was
marked, and the most pronounced in four months.
Despite
the improving growth picture in September, firms reported waning confidence in
the year-ahead outlook. Sentiment remained positive overall but was the lowest
since August 2021 and among the weakest on record. Those firms that expressed
optimism often mentioned business expansion plans.
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