Don’t Miss a Post. Subscribe now.

Manufacturing ISM Contracts Four Month With New Orders Down Six Straight Months

Chart and excerpts below by permission from the Institute for Supply Management ® ISM® 

Please consider the February 2023 Manufacturing ISM® Report On Business® by  Timothy R. Fiore, CPSM, C.P.M., Chair of the Institute for Supply Management® (ISM®) Manufacturing Business Survey Committee:

ISM Key Points – Emphasis Mine 

  • The U.S. manufacturing sector contracted in February, as the Manufacturing PMI® registered 47.7 percent, 0.3 percentage point higher than the reading of 47.4 percent recorded in January. “This is the fourth month of slow contraction and continuation of a downward trend that began in June 2022. Of the five subindexes that directly factor into the Manufacturing PMI®, only one (the Inventories Index), was in growth territory, and just barely.
  • For the last two months, the PMI® has registered its lowest levels since May 2020, when the index was at 43.5 percent. Of the six biggest manufacturing industries, two (Transportation Equipment; and Petroleum & Coal Products) registered strong growth in February. The Production Index logged a third month in contraction territory. Only three of the 10 subindexes were positive for the period,” says Fiore. A reading above 50 percent indicates that the manufacturing sector is generally expanding; below 50 percent indicates that it is generally contracting.
  • A Manufacturing PMI® above 48.7 percent, over a period of time, generally indicates an expansion of the overall economy. Therefore, the February Manufacturing PMI® indicates the overall economy contracted in February for a third consecutive month after 30 straight months of expansion.
  • “The past relationship between the Manufacturing PMI® and the overall economy indicates that the February reading (47.7 percent) corresponds to a change of minus-0.3 percent in real gross domestic product (GDP) on an annualized basis,” says Fiore.

Industries in Expansion and Contraction

  • Expansion: Apparel, Leather & Allied Products; Transportation Equipment; Petroleum & Coal Products; and Electrical Equipment, Appliances & Components. 
  • Contraction: Printing & Related Support Activities; Paper Products; Wood Products; Textile Mills; Furniture & Related Products; Nonmetallic Mineral Products; Plastics & Rubber Products; Food, Beverage & Tobacco Products; Chemical Products; Primary Metals; Computer & Electronic Products; Fabricated Metal Products; Machinery; and Miscellaneous Manufacturing.

 Prices

  • The ISM® Prices Index registered 51.3 percent, 6.8 percentage points higher compared to the January reading of 44.5 percent, indicating raw materials prices increased in February. The index ended a four-month period in “decreasing” territory preceded by 28 straight months of “increasing” status.
  • A Prices Index above 52.9 percent, over time, is generally consistent with an increase in the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Producer Price Index for Intermediate Materials.

There is more in the report. I put a spotlight on some of the key ideas.

The ISM is a diffusion index, signaling direction not amount. For example a firm hiring 10 workers and a firm laying off 200 workers balances out.

Diffusion indexes have issues. And there is a survival bias and a weighting bias.

Excluding the early months of the pandemic, manufacturing is at the lowest level since 2009.

The biggest disconnect from reality is inventories growing for 19 months with employment reasonably strong as everything else is in contraction. 

This post originated on MishTalk.Com.

Thanks for Tuning In!

Please Subscribe to MishTalk Email Alerts.

Subscribers get an email alert of each post as they happen. Read the ones you like and you can unsubscribe at any time.

If you have subscribed and do not get email alerts, please check your spam folder.

Mish

Subscribe to MishTalk Email Alerts.

Subscribers get an email alert of each post as they happen. Read the ones you like and you can unsubscribe at any time.

This post originated on MishTalk.Com

Thanks for Tuning In!

Mish

Comments to this post are now closed.

13 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Matt3
Matt3
3 years ago
Finally one of our suppliers come in and say they see things beginning to slow. They are a large national supplier of metals. Said they are seeing smaller shops that generally handle overflow from bigger companies have work moved back inside.
So far, we are still busy, our customers are busy and we are getting a lot of inquires.
We are fabricated metal products.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
3 years ago
Reply to  Matt3
Stamping, cutting or adding?
8dots
8dots
3 years ago
XLI weekly, backbone : May 10/17 2021, 103.92/ 97.96. The do nothing XLI might have an upthrust. MFG cut their sample lines, their sku. dumped losers, focus on winners.
Salmo Trutta
Salmo Trutta
3 years ago

The FED changed the reporting of the money supply from weekly to monthly. This was done in an effort to shift attention away from money supply growth.

Powell destroyed deposit classifications in May 2020 (eliminated the 6 withdrawal restrictions on savings accounts, which isolated money intended for spending, or means-of-payment money, from the money held as savings, or the demand for money (reciprocal of velocity).

“it seems that the modification of Regulation D in late April has effectively rendered savings accounts almost indistinguishable from checking accounts from the perspective of depositors and banks. Accordingly, the composition of M2 between M1 and non-M1 components conveys little economic information.”

What’s behind the recent surge in the M1 money supply?

Powell:
#1 “there was a time when monetary policy aggregates were important determinants of inflation and that has not been the case for a long time.”
#2 “Inflation is not a problem for this time as near as I can figure. Right now, M2 [money supply] does not really have important implications. It is something we have to unlearn.”
#3 “the correlation between different aggregates [like] M2 and inflation is just very, very low”.

The rate-of-change in currency in circulation is back to 2010 levels. The 6-month roc in our means-of-payment money has turned negative. When the 10-month roc turns negative there will be a recession. But now the FED won’t know about it after a lag.

Directed Energy
Directed Energy
3 years ago
No contraction in the Huntsville metro, still expanding 7% yOy
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
This is measured for the Huntsville metro area? Any links to the data?
Mac Timred
Mac Timred
3 years ago
The $64,000 question is whether ISM weakness is signaling actual downturn or just reversion to mean after boom of Covid related.
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
3 years ago
Reply to  Mac Timred
Recessions typically stem from inventory corrections.
Stimulus waning + massive debt overhang will not be kind to this chart.
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
3 years ago
“The biggest disconnect from reality is inventories growing for 19 months with employment reasonably strong as everything else is in contraction.”
Reality beginning to set in. “Experts” always the last to figure things out.
Early in Q4 S&P500 consensus:
“Looking ahead, analysts expect earnings growth of 3.6% for Q4 2022”
How Q4 faring as of last week:
“For Q4 2022, the blended earnings decline for the S&P 500 is -4.8%. If -4.8% is the actual
decline for the quarter, it will mark the first time the index has reported a year-over-year decline in earnings since
Q3 2020 (-5.7%).”
HippyDippy
HippyDippy
3 years ago
I’ve been noticing that common items aren’t available anymore. For example, I was trying to buy a bunch of items at Lowe’s yesterday. 1/2 lock washers, washers, and similar items always available. Until now. Also, there’s a lot of consolidation in the health food industry. Especially in the synthetic vitamins. Big firms buying up a lot of companies and discontinuing many of the actual healthy choices in favor of the cheap, and useless, synthetic products. A prolonged recession, or even a probable depression in light of the crazy mandates, will end with even fewer actual choices.
shamrock
shamrock
3 years ago
So why are bond yields rising on this news?
HippyDippy
HippyDippy
3 years ago
Reply to  shamrock
Yields rise because they have to in order to attract buyers.
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
3 years ago
Reply to  shamrock
German cpi came in hot … +0.8% vs +0.6% expected (month over month).
with an assist from (former?) uber dove Kashkari. Gave a speech this morning saying rates need to go higher.

Decorate Your Walls with Mish Fine Art Images

Click each image to view details or purchase in the store.

Stay Informed

Subscribe to MishTalk

You will receive all messages from this feed and they will be delivered by email.