New Zealand's manufacturing sector expanded last month at the fastest clip for the month of May since 2006, led by production and new orders.
The BNZ-BusinessNZ Performance of Services Index rose 7.5 points in seasonally adjusted terms to 55.7 in May from a month earlier. A reading of 50 separates a contraction from an expansion.
All five of the sub-indexes expanded, led by production on 58.8 points and new orders on 57.3 points. Employment experienced a small decrease but remained in expansion on 52.2 points. Deliveries returned to expansion, while finished stocks were little changed on 50.5 points.
"May's strong PMI result confirms a decent rebound from the dip in April and it shows activity has not been dented like general confidence," Doug Steel, economist at Bank of New Zealand said in a statement. "While improvement is far from uniform, there are a few hints of forecast growth drivers starting to appear."
"It is certainly enough to keep our long-held view intact that the manufacturing sector is on a mildly positive trend," he said.