Indian manufacturing growth nearly stalled in May as factory output shrank for the first time in over four years, a survey showed on Monday, suggesting the economy remained frail at the start of the new fiscal year.
The sombre PMI findings came hard on the heels of data released on Friday that confirmed Asia's third largest economy grew at its slowest pace in a decade in the fiscal year that ended in March.
The overall HSBC Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI), which gauges business activity in Indian factories but not its utilities, sank to 50.1 in May from 51.0 in April, and was the third straight monthly fall.
Though the May reading was the lowest since March 2009, the overall index has held above the watershed 50 level that divides growth from contraction for over four years.
The reading for the factory production sub-index, however, showed output contracted in May from a month earlier as new orders growth slowed to a trickle. The output sub-index fell to 48.6 in May from 50.2 in April.
"Economic activity in the manufacturing sector slowed further in May as output contracted in response to softer domestic orders," said Leif Eskesen, an economist with survey sponsor HSBC. Eskesen said power outages added to the drop in production.
Years of reckless spending, a long struggle containing inflation, high interest rates, policy paralysis and fragile global demand have put India back in a rut of slow growth.
The PMI survey has shown factory activity in April and May has slowed to the brink of contraction, which will likely hamper the feeble recovery seen in the January-March