Singapore's November export growth slows, weighed by non-electronics goods

Reuters  |  SINGAPORE 

By Fathin Ungku

(Reuters) - Singapore's on-year non-domestic (NODX) growth slowed significantly in November from October's double-digit pace, dragged by a high base effect from a year ago and cooling growth of non-electronic products, official data showed on Monday.

rose 9.1 percent in November year-on-year, data from the trade agency International Enterprise showed, slowing from a revised 20.5 percent surge the month before.

While the growth was faster than the 5.5 percent increase predicted by economists in a poll, it is significantly weaker than October's pace, which was the fastest on-year pace in 2-1/2 years.

"Moderation is to be expected because of the high base last year," said Selena Ling, economist at OCBC Bank.

The boom has benefited and other trade-dependent Asian economies, particularly for makers of electronics products and components such as semiconductors.

Electronics in November grew 5.2 percent from the year before, a modest acceleration from the 4.5 percent growth in October.

With the exception of a "one-off blip" in September when it contracted a revised 8.0 percent, of electronics have grown at a double-digit pace for most months of this year.

"We already knew that (stellar electronics export numbers) won't last forever," Ling told

Singapore's strong electronics export numbers have raised concerns among analysts and policymakers that the base of expansion has been too narrow.

While the on-year growth in non-electronic products slowed in November from its previous hot pace, it remained at a double digit pace at 10.6 percent.

"What is encouraging is that non-electronics is sustaining export growth," Ling added.

On a seasonally adjusted month-on-month basis, grew 8.7 percent in November after growing a revised 12.3 percent in October. The poll called for a 0.6 percent growth from the month before.

The Monetary Authority of held policy steady in October but changed a reference to maintaining current settings for an extended period, a shift that analysts said created room for a tightening next year.

(Reporting by Fathin Ungku; Editing by Sam Holmes)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, December 18 2017. 09:19 IST