The July PMI survey of Qatar pointed to a strongly positive 12-month outlook for business activity in the non-energy private sector, while current business conditions grew more subdued.

The Qatar PMI indices are compiled from survey responses from a panel of around 400 private sector companies. The Qatar Financial Centre PMI is compiled by IHS Markit.

The panel covers the manufacturing, construction, wholesale, retail and services sectors, and reflects the structure of the non-energy economy according to official data.

The headline figure is the Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI). The PMI is a weighted average of five indices for new orders, output, employment, suppliers’ delivery times and stocks of purchases, and is designed to provide a timely single-figure snapshot of the health of the economy every month.

The PMI ebbed from June's 47.2 to 45.2 in July, after adjusting for seasonal factors. This mirrors the recent trend of weakening PMI data globally, notably in manufacturing.

Over the second quarter as a whole the PMI averaged 48.1, and this figure provides an advance signal of the direction of change in official gross domestic product (GDP), which is only published on a quarterly basis.

Based on historical comparisons with official GDP data back to the second quarter of 2017, the PMI figure for the second quarter of 2019 is consistent with a pause in GDP expansion.

Since the survey began in April 2017, the PMI has a correlation of 0.90 with the year-on-year percentage change in GDP in real terms, over a comparison period of eight quarters up to the first quarter of 2019. Most recently, the PMI accurately signalled the marked slowdown in annual growth of GDP in the final quarter of last year to 0.3%, and the subsequent pick-up in the first quarter of 2019 to 0.9%.

The official estimate for the first quarter of 2019 was published on July 4; three months after the March PMI data were published.

The easing of the PMI in July reflected weaker contributions from four of its five components, including output, new business, employment and stocks of purchases.

A positive contribution came from suppliers' delivery times (although this index fell in July, it is subsequently inverted for the PMI calculation).

More positively, the 12-month outlook for total business activity remained strong at the start of the third quarter as the Future Output Index was little-changed from June at 80.1.

Nearly 68% of survey respondents expect higher workloads at their units over the next 12 months, with confidence strongest in the financial services sector.

There was a general lack of inflationary pressure in the non-energy private sector economy in July, as average input prices were broadly unchanged since June. Staff costs fell for the fourth month running, and at a faster rate, foreshadowing lower production costs for Qatari firms. Companies retained price levels charged broadly stable, following a 17-month sequence of discounting, which is encouraging for the business community.

Sheikha Alanoud bint Hamad al-Thani, executive director (Business Development) at QFC Authority said, “Qatar’s non-energy private sector looks to have ebbed as we move into the second half of 2019. Although indicators for current output and new orders have moderated, by contrast the 12-month outlook for activity is strongly positive and well above the survey trend. Just over two-thirds of companies are expecting business activity growth by mid-2020.

“The PMI has accurately signalled changes in recent official quarterly GDP data, which are now available for the first quarter of 2019. Having tracked slower growth in the final quarter of last year, the PMI trended higher in the first quarter, indicating year-on-year expansion in real terms GDP of 0.9%. This growth figure was subsequently published as the first official estimate in early-July.”

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