US Manufacturing PMI at 28-Month Low, Services Back in Contraction With Strong Declines

Please consider the S&P Global Flash US Composite PMI™

Key Findings

  • Flash US PMI Composite Output Index at 47.3 (September: 49.5). 2-month low.
  • Flash US Services Business Activity Index at 46.6 (September: 49.3). 2-month low. 
  • Flash US Manufacturing Output Index at 50.7 (September: 50.6). 5-month high.
  • Flash US Manufacturing PMI at 49.9 (September: 52.0). 28-month low.  

Private sector firms in the US recorded a further downturn in output at the start of the fourth quarter, according to latest ‘flash’ PMI™ data from S&P Global. The fall in business activity was solid and stronger than that seen in September, as service providers signalled a quicker decline. Manufacturers, on the other hand, saw output rise for the second month running, albeit only marginally. 

The headline Flash US PMI Composite Output Index registered 47.3 in October, down from 49.5 in September. With the exception of the initial pandemic period, the rate of decrease was the second-fastest since 2009.  

New orders returned to contraction territory in October. The decrease in new business was only marginal, but was broad based as manufacturers and service providers alike recorded weaker client demand. Goods producers drove the decline, with companies highlighting the impact of inflation and stockbuilding earlier in the year on customer demand, as clients utilised current holdings of inputs and semi-finished items. A reduction in foreign customer demand was also indicated as a strong dollar and challenging economic conditions in key export markets reportedly weighed on new export orders. New business from abroad fell sharply and at the quickest pace since May 2020.  

 S&P Global Flash US Services PMI™ 

The S&P Global Flash US Services Business Activity Index posted at 46.6 in October, down from 49.3 in September, to indicate a solid decline in service sector output. The latest data signalled an acceleration in the decline in business activity to the second-fastest fall in almost two-and-a-half years. Firms linked the decrease to weak client demand and the impact of inflation and higher interest rates. At the same time, new business fell for the second time in the last three months, albeit only marginally overall. Weighing on total new sales was a drop in foreign client demand. New export orders declined at a solid pace due to inflationary pressure in key export markets.  

Chris Williamson, Chief Business Economist at S&P Global Market Comments

  •  “The US economic downturn gathered significant momentum in October, while confidence in the outlook also deteriorated sharply. The decline was led by a downward lurch in services activity, fuelled by the rising cost of living and tightening financial conditions. While output in manufacturing remains more resilient for now, October saw a steep drop in demand for goods, meaning current output is only being maintained by firms eating into backlogs of previously placed orders. Clearly this is unsustainable absent of a revival in demand, and it’s no surprise to see firms cutting back sharply on their input buying to prepare for lower output in coming months. 
  • “One upside of this drop in input buying has been a further alleviation of supply constraints, which alongside the stronger dollar have helped cool price pressures in the manufacturing sector. 
  • “Although price pressures picked up slightly in the service sector due to high food, energy and staff costs, as well as rising borrowing costs, increased competitive forces meant average prices charged for services grew at only a fractionally faster rate. Combined with the easing of price pressures in the goods-producing sector, this adds to evidence that consumer price inflation should cool in coming months. 
  • The surveys therefore present a picture of the economy at increased risk of contracting in the fourth quarter at the same time that inflationary pressures remain stubbornly high. However, there are clearly signs that weakening demand is helping to moderate the overall rate of inflation, which should continue to fall in the coming months, especially if interest rates continue to rise.”  

Key Ideas

Inflation is moderating but the cost is recession

Export orders are weakening in both goods and services. Companies are holding together for now on the unsustainable strength of backlogs.

This does not seem to match the trade surge in GDPNow. 

For discussion, please see GDPNow Creator Pat Higgins On the October Surge in the GDP Forecast

Nor is an alleged surge in China’s exports consistent with an export surge in the US. China’s trade surplus for the first nine months of 2022 was 49% larger than it was over the same period last year, which was itself a record trade surplus.

For discussion of China’s exports, please see China’s GDP Beats Expectations But Retail Sales Are Weak Again

A reader asked about the discrepancies and all I could come up with is LNG and soybean exports and/or the GDPNow model factoring in more than was really there.

Regardless, the global economy is slowing fact. The US will not escape recession no matter what the wishers, hopers, real estate agents, and president Biden say.

This post originated at MishTalk.Com

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16 Comments
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Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
3 years ago
you left out something from US Services PMI:
“A return to decline in the level of outstanding business led
to service sector firms reducing their workforce numbers
during October. Companies noted the non-replacement of
voluntary leavers, alongside some reports of lay-offs. The
decrease in employment was the first since June 2020”
LauriL
LauriL
3 years ago
Export and manufacturing are relatively small parts from GDP. Recession in the rest of the world and strong dollar is not good for the US manufacturing, but the rest of the economy should be on the winner side, if not counting the inflation.
US Import seems to be on a strong footing, but business inventories are up 18% YoY. I am not able to find YoY change for the main sources of inventory growth, taken apart. It would be interesting to see, where the main “squeeze” points lie.
StukiMoi
StukiMoi
3 years ago
Reply to  LauriL
“Export and manufacturing are relatively small parts from GDP.”
And drinking water is an even smaller part. With fresh air being smaller yet….
Should tell you something about the usefulness of GDP for drawing ANY conclusion…
JeffD
JeffD
3 years ago
Yes, but what is the absolute level of activity vs three years ago? Up 25%? These monthly changes are irrelevant compared to the big picture.
RonJ
RonJ
3 years ago
“Downturn… momentum” and “downward lurching.”
Not the verbiage of a soft landing.
MarkraD
MarkraD
3 years ago
Reply to  RonJ
“Although price pressures picked up slightly in the service sector due to high food, energy and staff costs, as well as rising borrowing costs, increased competitive forces meant average prices charged for services grew at only a fractionally faster rate. Combined with the easing of price pressures in the goods-producing sector, this adds to evidence that consumer price inflation should cool in coming months.”
I mean, if we’re cherry-picking.
.
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
the global economy is slowing fact
Fact should be fast.
MarkraD
MarkraD
3 years ago
Newton’ third law.
Dramatic fiscal and monetary stimulus in 2020 forcing a dramatic reaction.
Captain Ahab
Captain Ahab
3 years ago
Reply to  MarkraD
IMHO, Newton’s (attributed) “What goes up must come down,” is equally apt. Unfortunately, Newton didn’t say anything about idiots in high position: https://twitter.com/bennyjohnson/status/1584523659682934784
MarkraD
MarkraD
3 years ago
Reply to  Captain Ahab
I’ll vote for Alfred E Newman, in a drug induced haze, if he listens to advisors who know what they’re talking about, this was Trump’s downfall, he’s a know-it-all, he hired “the best people” who were most willing to do exactly what he wanted and fired them when they wouldn’t.
I remember him openly lambasting the Fed for lower rates and then readily signing off on beaucoup stimulus, trashing Republican’s claim of economic aptitude.
.
Matt3
Matt3
3 years ago
Reply to  MarkraD
Yes. He made mistakes. Like most people, he was wrong on some and right on some. Here are some that look pretty good today.
Germans shouldn’t rely on Russia for energy.
Treasury should be moving US debt to longer term while rates were low.
US should buy and fill oil reserve when prices went negative.
Keystone pipeline would be valuable to US energy.
US should strive to be a leader in energy – both fossil fuels and other technologies.
KidHorn
KidHorn
3 years ago
Reply to  MarkraD
How is that worse than hiring people based on their appearance instead of their aptitude?
RonJ
RonJ
3 years ago
Reply to  MarkraD
In a meeting, Dr. Birx got angry at Dr. Atlas. Atlas responded to Birx that Trump asked a question and he told him the truth. Why didn’t Birx want Trump to be told the truth?
Trump never fired Fauci. Trump had wanted to open the economy by Easter and relented to Birx and Fauci.
MarkraD
MarkraD
3 years ago
Reply to  RonJ
“Only 15 cases, will soon be zero”
Right at the most important time, when we needed to contain it, he encouraged everyone to carry on like nothing was wrong, a month later hospitals were renting refrigerator trucks to store the dead, ultimately leading to a shut down to stop the surge, hospitals couldn’t handle it.
Dr Birx had to deal with criticism for not speaking out when Trump proposed citizens might “inject bleach”, later it was HCQ, then Ivermectin, both were disproven.
He had the same M/O with lawyers, generals, doctors, diplomats, economists and intelligence professionals….often demolishing their careers in the process, and with defamation after the fact.
“I alone can…”
He alone can continue to swindle private sector investors and bankrupt businesses, but not my country, thanks, but no thanks.
Captain Ahab
Captain Ahab
3 years ago
Reply to  MarkraD
This is Biden’s reign of terror. The video I posted clearly shows he is incapable of clear thought and should not be trusted with executive powers. Bringing up what Trump did, or did not do, does not change that.
Matt3
Matt3
3 years ago
Reply to  MarkraD
Drastic fiscal and monetary stimulus continued in 2021 and into 2022. Government spending is still simulative and the Fed ran QE into March on 2022.

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