Mumbai, June 1 (KNN) There was a moderation in
sentiment among Micro and Small Enterprises (MSEs) during the quarter
ending March 31, 2019, the 6th CriSidEx survey shows.
CriSidEx or the CRISIL-SIDBI MSE Sentiment Index was launched by
CRISIL Ltd and Small Industries Development Bank of India (SIDBI) last
year.
At a parameter level, while both manufacturing and services sectors
reported a small increase in the share of positive respondents on
order-book size, both sectors reported a decrease in the share of
positive respondents in employee base compared with the previous
quarter.
At 122, the CriSidEx score for January-March 2019 was moderately
lower than the 128 seen in October-December 2018, but marginally up from
121 a year back.
Chairman and Managing Director of SIDBI, Mohammad Mustafa said “On a
year-on-year basis, MSEs operating in the leather & leather goods,
chemicals, pharmaceuticals, IT/ITeS, and human resources segments
reported a noticeable increase in positive sentiment, while those into
gems & jewellery, textiles, auto components and health care had a
relatively subdued outing.
Among manufacturing MSEs, 42% reported a good survey quarter, which
is on a par with the quarter immediately preceding. And 39% of services
providers reported a good quarter compared with 41% in the previous
quarter. The number, however, was better than the 29% in the same period
a year ago.
Chief Operating Officer, CRISIL Ltd, Amish Mehta said “Sentiment in
the March quarter was shaped by a host of factors such as slowdown in
auto sales leading to inventory pile-up and production cuts by the
automobile industry; slower tendering/awarding ahead of elections
affecting the engineering goods sector; and, regulations impacting
logistics.”
In the April-June 2019 quarter, sentiment about the business
situation is expected to remain positive but the share of respondents
expecting a good next quarter is the lowest in all six CriSidEx surveys
so far.
Larger MSEs had a better survey quarter –as many as 47% of them with
more than 25 employees compared, with 30% with less than 10 employees.
Export-oriented MSEs fared better than their domestic peers, with 45%
reporting an increase in order book compared with 43% of domestic
peers. In the past two quarters, exporters have been consistently faring
better than domestic market focused MSEs. Among importers, the share of
respondents that saw higher procurement in January-March 2019 declined
to 17% from 25% in the preceding quarter.
In terms of production volume, 43% of manufacturing MSEs reported an
increase, which is a continuation of the trend seen in the previous
quarter. A similar share of manufacturing MSMEs expect an increase in
production in April-June, while only 8% expect it to be lower.
MSEs said they expected to hire more in April-June with 18%
respondents planning to add employees compared with 11% that did in
January-March. As for lenders, they remain cautious on the evolving
business situation.
Reference By : https://knnindia.co.in/news/newsdetails/knowledge-resource/mses-expect-more-hiring-in-coming-months-crisidex