Philippine Manufacturing Growth Cools in March
2026-04-01 00:46
By
Kyrie Dichosa
1 min. read
The S&P Global Philippines Manufacturing PMI fell to 51.3 in March 2026 from 54.6 in February, marking a three-month low.
Softer expansions in output and new orders were attributed largely to the war in the Middle East, which also led to a modest decline in new export sales.
As a result, firms broadly paused purchasing activity, while inventories of pre-production items fell modestly for the first time in four months.
Input prices surged amid higher energy costs and material shortages, causing operating expenses and factory gate charges to rise sharply.
Employment growth continued for a third consecutive month but at the slowest pace in this sequence, while backlogs of work increased at the fastest rate in four months due to delays in receiving inputs.
Despite these challenges, manufacturers’ sentiment regarding the 12-month outlook improved to a four-month high, with firms hopeful that easing geopolitical tensions and demand conditions will support growth in the year ahead.