Thailand’s Industrial Output Falls for Eighth Months on Exports
Suttinee Yuvejwattana
July 31 (Bloomberg) -- Thailand’s industrial production fell for an eighth month in June as the global recession slashed demand for automobiles and processed food. The magnitude of the drop was the smallest since November.
A measure of manufacturing production dropped 7.8 percent from a revised 9.8 percent decline a month earlier, Pichit Patrawimolpon, a Bank of Thailand director, said today in Bangkok. The median estimate of 15 economists in a Bloomberg survey was for a 9.5 percent contraction.
“The Thai economy has hit the bottom,” said Kosit Panpiemras, executive chairman at Bangkok Bank Pcl, the nation’s largest lender. “But it will take time for us to return to growth. Global trade remains very weak and that will hurt export-dependent economies like ours.”
Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy, in its first recession in a decade, may return to growth in the fourth quarter, the Bank of Thailand predicts, citing indications the worst of the contraction has passed. Hana Microelectronics Pcl and the local unit of Western Digital Corp. have begun rehiring workers to meet revived demand for their exports.
Thailand’s SET Index of stocks gained 0.3 percent as of the 12:30 p.m. lunch break. The baht was little changed at 34.03 per dollar.
Trade
Exports, which are equivalent to about 60 percent of Thailand’s economy, slid 26.4 percent to $12.2 billion in June from a year earlier, declining for an eighth month, the central bank said today. They sank 26.5 percent a month earlier.
Thailand’s imports fell 26.3 percent last month to $11.2 billion after a 34.3 percent drop a month earlier. The trade surplus in June was $939 million compared with a $2.34 billion excess a month earlier, the central bank said.
A measure of business sentiment was 46.3 in June from 45.4 a month earlier, the central bank said. The reading hasn’t exceeded 50, a level that suggests the mood is improving, since April 2004.
The current account-surplus narrowed to $477 million in June from $1.39 billion a month earlier. The median estimate of 11 economists in a Bloomberg News survey was for a $738 million surplus.
The current account comprises the difference between exports and imports of goods, services, investment income and remittances. Trade makes up about 70 percent of the current account, and tourism contributes most of the service industry’s 30 percent component.
Tourist arrivals dropped 18.6 percent from a year earlier to 940,000 last month, the central bank said today. The number of people visiting Thailand has fallen for 10 straight months, the longest contraction since Bloomberg began tracking arrivals in 1997.
bloomberg.com


Reply With Quote


