Malaysia’s Manufacturing Sector Shows Early Signs of Stabilization

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(MENAFN) Malaysia’s manufacturing industry demonstrated signs of stabilizing in the latter half of 2025, though companies remain cautious due to uneven demand and ongoing cost pressures, according to recent reports.

The latest business conditions survey revealed modest improvements in key operational indicators following a slower first half of the year. The Business Conditions Index increased to 103 from the previous 77, while production levels and capacity utilization rose to 102, suggesting a gradual return to steadier operations.

Despite this progress, demand recovery continues to be fragile. Local and export sales both remained below the neutral threshold of 100, recording 94 and 93 respectively, while production costs stayed high at 146, highlighting sustained pressure on profit margins.

Looking forward, manufacturers anticipate a gradual improvement in the first half of 2026.

Projections for business activity (104), production and capacity utilization (106), capital investment (110), and employment (106) are expected to support this cautious optimism.

Nevertheless, firms noted ongoing uncertainties, particularly regarding demand conditions and input costs. “Production costs expected to remain high,” reports indicate, keeping companies wary.

The survey also drew attention to new challenges from U.S. reciprocal tariffs. Some manufacturers reported margin compression, declining orders, and supply chain disruptions, raising concerns about the long-term competitiveness of Malaysian exports.

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