Factory activity plunges as coronavirus shock deepens
A worker welds at a market under construction in Kunming · Reuters

By Jonathan Cable, Leika Kihara and Lucia Mutikani

LONDON/TOKYO/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Factories fell quiet across much of the world in March as the coronavirus pandemic paralyzed economic activity, with evidence mounting that the world is sliding into deep recession.

Manufacturing activity has tumbled, purchasing managers' index (PMI) surveys showed on Wednesday, with sharp slowdowns in export powerhouses like Germany and Japan overshadowing a modest improvement in China. In the United States, one widely followed survey showed the contraction in output was not as dramatic as feared, but new orders slumped to an 11-year low, signaling the worst is still to come.

The virus pandemic has infected more than 850,000 people around the globe and forced factories, shops and schools to close amid government-imposed lockdowns.

This has upended supply chains and crushed demand for goods as consumers worried about job prospects rein in their spending and stay indoors.

In the euro zone, IHS Markit's final March manufacturing PMI sank to its lowest since mid-2012, when the currency union's debt crisis was raging, and was well below the mark separating growth from contraction. [EUR/PMIM]

Markit's final reading of U.S. activity in March showed output at its slowest since 2009, with coronavirus-related supply shortages a key factor in the decline. In a competing survey from the Institute for Supply Management, the forward-looking new orders sub-index dropped to the lowest since March 2009.

Meanwhile, private-sector U.S. employers cut the most jobs in two-and-a-half years in March, according to the ADP National Employment Report, which probably underestimates the scope of job losses because the survey period ended before the most sweeping social-distancing efforts took effect. In one week in mid-March alone, a record 3.3 million Americans sought unemployment benefits for the first time, and another 3.5 million or more are expected to have sought assistance last week.

"Looking ahead, the timing and strength of the recovery is highly uncertain so long as major parts of the domestic economy are on virtual lockdown and external demand remains in the doldrums," said Oren Klachkin, lead economist at Oxford Economics in New York.

Output from Britain's factories shrank at the fastest pace since the debt crisis as the spread of coronavirus led to a spiraling of delays and hammered business confidence. [GB/PMIM]

In Canada, factory activity was the slowest since October 2010.

Global fund managers polled by Reuters are convinced the world economy is already in recession, similar to economists' assessments in another Reuters poll. [ASSET/WRAP] [ECILT/WRAP]