Singapore Technical Recession Fears Grow After Output Plunge

Singapore’s industrial output fell the most since November 2019, raising the risk of the economy slipping into a technical recession.

(Bloomberg) — Singapore’s industrial output fell the most since November 2019, raising the risk of the economy slipping into a technical recession.

Factory production declined 10.8% from a year earlier in May, worse than the 7.3% drop predicted in a Bloomberg survey, marking the eighth straight month of contraction.

Output of electronics industry, which accounts for the largest weight in the city-state’s export-driven manufacturing sector, plunged 23% on the year, with semiconductors seeing the cluster’s worst drop. 

Economists, including from Barclays Plc and Maybank Research, now expect Singapore’s economy to contract in the second quarter compared to the previous three months, enough to count as a technical recession after first-quarter’s 0.4% decline. 

Earlier, Singapore had downgraded non-oil export trade growth this year to a drop of between 8% and 10% due to worse-than-expected performance in manufacturing. Although authorities then kept the full-year growth view unchanged at 0.5%-2.5%, Maybank’s Senior Economist Chua Hak Bin expects they will downgrade the forecast amid signs of persisting manufacturing downturn. 

In May, the Ministry of Trade and Industry had stated that it doesn’t expect a technical recession, although it noted that if that situation were to materialize it would be due to weakness in manufacturing and trade. 

(Updates throughout.)

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