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The Financial Express

Singapore Nov factory output rise below forecast

| Updated: December 26, 2017 19:16:10


File Photo (Collected) File Photo (Collected)

The industrial production of Singapore in November rose less than expected from a year earlier, underscoring expectations for a moderation in the city-state’s economic growth in the fourth quarter.

Manufacturing output rose 5.3 per cent last month from a year earlier, weaker than the median forecast in a Reuters poll that flagged 9.0 per cent growth.

The latest production data reinforces the likelihood that economic growth in the Q4 will slow after a stellar third quarter, said Francis Tan, an economist for United Overseas Bank.

 “On a year-on-year basis it will pull back from the strong GDP that we saw in the third quarter,” Tan said.

Economists have been flagging the chances of a moderation in fourth-quarter economic growth, partly because of a comparison against a high base recorded late last year.

On a month-on-month and seasonally adjusted basis, the manufacturing output fell 2.3 per cent in November, data from the Economic Development Board showed. The median forecast was an increase of 0.7 per cent.

Industrial production was underpinned by electronics output, which increased 27.6 per cent from a year earlier, with semiconductor production rising 36.4 per cent.

Such gains, however, were lower than the expansions recorded in October, when electronics output surged nearly 45 per cent and semiconductor production jumped 64 per cent.

Weakness in pharmaceuticals and marine offshore engineering output tempered the overall rise in industrial production in November, with pharmaceuticals output shrinking 31.1 per cent and offshore engineering production sinking 31.9 per cent.

The production data came just a week before the release of the government’s advance estimate of fourth-quarter gross domestic product, which is due on Jan. 2.

In the third quarter, Singapore’s economy grew 5.2 per cent from a year earlier, its quickest year-on-year pace in nearly four years, thanks to a boom in manufacturing that some analysts say will encourage tighter monetary policy in 2018.

Separate data on Tuesday showed Singapore’s headline consumer price index rose a slightly faster-than-expected 0.6 per cent in November from a year earlier as private road transport costs edged higher.

The central bank’s core inflation gauge increased 1.5 per cent from a year earlier, in line with expectations and matching October’s pace.

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