Even though the Hungarian Central Statistical Office (HCSO) will only release the detailed data next week (13 April), the preliminary statement highlights that the majority of the manufacturing subsectors contributed to the production decline. As in January, the only silver linings were electrical and transport equipment manufacturing (e.g. electric vehicle batteries and cars), which both expanded on an annual basis in February.
On the other hand, the volume of production fell in the manufacture of computer, electronic and optical products, along with the manufacture of food, beverages, and tobacco products. The latter does not come as a surprise, given that the volume of sales in this particular sub-sector has been contracting since June 2022 on a yearly basis, as we pointed out in our last note.
It is clear that only the automotive sector can breathe any kind of life into the Hungarian industry. What’s more interesting is that HCSO has highlighted for the first time since the pandemic that “the majority of the manufacturing subsections contributed to the production decline”, which indicates broad-based weakness. At this point, even the over-performance of the automotive sub-sector cannot counterbalance the fact that most of the Hungarian industry is struggling amid an ongoing technical recession.
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Moreover, the average monthly mean temperature in February was 1-2 degrees colder than a year earlier. This would have boosted the production of the energy sector in previous years. However, the Hungarian government restructured the overheads protection scheme last summer, with the balance tilted toward supporting more conscious energy usage. Against this backdrop, the difference in temperature did not result in higher energy consumption, and this time, the energy sector may have been more of a drag on the performance of the Hungarian industry.
We had hoped that as global energy prices retreated, we would see a stark rebound in overall industrial performance, but the reality may be that only the larger industrial firms have been able to negotiate favourable energy contracts. This would mean that smaller firms may be stuck with energy contracts that do not follow the price of TTF natural gas, which was below €60 for the whole month of February.
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