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US Service Sector Strength or Weakness? Let’s Review Conflicting Reports

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

Please consider the January 2023 Services ISM® Report On Business®

“In January, the Services PMI® registered 55.2 percent, 6 percentage points higher than December’s seasonally adjusted reading of 49.2 percent. The composite index grew in January after contracting in December for the first time since May 2020, when it registered 45.4 percent (seasonally adjusted). The Business Activity Index registered 60.4 percent, a 6.9-percentage point increase compared to the seasonally adjusted reading of 53.5 percent in December. The New Orders Index grew in January after contracting in December for the first time since May 2020; the figure of 60.4 percent is 15.2 percentage points higher than the seasonally adjusted December reading of 45.2 percent.”

A Caution About Diffusion Indexes

The ISM and S&P reports are diffusion indexes, signaling direction not amount. For example a firm hiring 10 workers and a firm laying off 200 workers balances out.

Diffusion indexes have issues. There is a survival bias and a weighting bias.

Let’s see what other indexes suggest about services. 

S&P Global US Services PMI™

Please consider the S&P Global US Services PMI™ for January 2023, emphasis mine.

Business activity contraction eases at start of 2023, but cost pressures strengthen once again.

January data signaled a solid contraction in business activity across the US service sector at the start of 2023, according to the latest PMI™ data. Although easing, the fall in output stemmed from further weak domestic and external demand conditions, as new business and new export orders declined. Firms continued to expand their workforce numbers despite another fall in backlogs of work, but the pace of employment growth slowed further amid reports of cost-cutting efforts. Nonetheless, business confidence strengthened and was buoyed by increased spending on marketing and investment in cost efficiency. At the same time, cost inflation picked up for the first time in eight months. A sharper rise in input prices was not reflected in a quicker increase in output charges, however, as selling prices rose at the slowest pace since October 2020. 

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

  •  “Business activity in the vast US services economy contracted in January as companies reported a further deterioration in new business inflows. Hiring has almost ground to halt as firms reassess their payroll needs in the light of the weaker demand environment
  • “The downturn is being led by a slump in financial services activity, linked in turn to higher borrowing costs, with consumer-facing service providers also reporting especially tough business conditions amid the ongoing squeeze in spending due to the rising cost of living
  • “Combined with the fall in manufacturing output recorded during the month, the service sector’s downturn at the start of the year adds to the risk that the US economy could contract in the first quarter

S&P Global US Sector PMI™

Let’s also consider S&P Global US Sector PMI™

Key Findings 

  • Five out of seven sectors register lower output in January 
  • Financials report by far the fastest fall in business activity 
  • Healthcare and Technology growth contrasts with declines elsewhere 

US Sector PMI™ indices are compiled from responses to questionnaires sent to purchasing managers in S&P Global’s US manufacturing and services PMI survey panels, covering over 1,000 private sector companies. Indices are available for the basic materials, consumer goods, consumer services, financials, healthcare, industrials and technology sectors.

January data pointed to falling business activity in five of the seven sectors monitored by S&P Global US Sector PMI data, although rates of contraction varied considerably. Financials (index at 35.0) saw by far the steepest downturn in business activity, while the Consumer Services sector (46.9) experienced the least marked decline. 

Financials has been the worst-performing category in each month since June 2022, largely reflecting subdued client demand in the wake of higher borrowing costs and heightened economic uncertainty. The downturn eased only slightly after the near-record reduction in business activity seen during the previous month.

Meanwhile, relatively sharp declines in production volumes were recorded across the Basic Materials and Consumer Goods sectors at the start of 2023. The downturn in Basic Materials output now stretches to seven consecutive months.

Consumer Services also recorded a decline in business activity for the seventh month in a row, which survey respondents mostly attributed to pressure on household finances from elevated inflation

Whom to Believe?

Which set or reports (two by S&P or one by ISM) rings true?

  • If you are in Fantasyland then ISM looks correct. 
  • If you reside in the real world, watching declining consumer spending in all categories, you are more likely to place some faith in the S&P reports.

Welcome to the Global Recession

Consumer spending hit a brick wall in the US, EU, UK and Australia. Guess what that means.

Welcome to the Global Recession, It Began in December Last Year

With consumer spending falling off the cliff, how long will jobs stay strong? Strong enough to prevent a recession that history suggests has already started?

In Wonderland, jobs will save the day, assuming you believe the December Jobs data, but I don’t.

This post originated at MishTalk.Com.

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12 Comments
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Oldest Most Voted
8dots
8dots
3 years ago
In early 2020 co paid higher wages to nurses, doctors, supermarkets employees, takeout window ladies, industrial workers…to compensate
for the risk and to attract workers.
8dots
8dots
3 years ago
Mish, inflation took off in Oct 2020. For 2 QT til May 2020 inflation was down testing 2015 low. Wages took off in Q1 2020 and stayed at the top for 12 weeks. Inflation was behind of the curve, behind industrial and service wages. Inflation responded to the inflated wages and not
vice versa. Every dot was accumulated to the top. In Q1 2021, after Biden became president, wages slumped. Since then, wages osc at lower highs, but so is inflation. In Apr 2020 Oil futures was was minus (-)$40. ==>
Wages are the cause. High commodities, stocks and RE are the symptoms.
8dots
8dots
3 years ago
Reply to  8dots
In Q1 after Putin invaded Ukraine wages slumped.
8dots
8dots
3 years ago
The 100 year event might end in soon, a new event, a #3 event, might start in June.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
i don’t think of any of the measures here have much validity after we just came off a world wide shut down and printing presses cranked to warp speed and helicopter drops to busboys to bankers to small and large business owners and run of the mill folks. i know for a fact there is no one on planet can get a handle on things this soon. i’d say we need another 5 years of “regular” world events like trade and some wars here and there. the wuhan flu plague was a 100 year event. trying to make sense of monthly numbers for only past 2 years is a fools game. i also have always thought the amerikan obsession to making sure they spend spend spend more and more on junk and mcmansions is really sort of dumb. perhaps a “recession” in spending so much is a blessing. i am enjoying rates rising and am confident powell is not bluffing. they need the ammo for the next bank bailouts, and i love the rates higher in bonds and FX. equity market has been beautiful to trade. seeing house prices come down after a nation wide bubble is just gravy.
Six000mileyear
Six000mileyear
3 years ago
Janet is yellen that January’s 500K job gains mean the economy is going well, but Main Street isn’t buying it. My commute since the start of the year has been less congested. What is Janet’s commute like? Has her commute become easier? That’s right. Everyone living in an Ivory Tower can WFH, detached from the real world.
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
Reply to  Six000mileyear
lots of folks commutes from bedroom to spare bedroom/office, especially after the world wide plague affect. a good thing if you ask me.
Jack
Jack
3 years ago
Reply to  vanderlyn

COVID was the greatest green initiative

vanderlyn
vanderlyn
3 years ago
Reply to  Jack
and a million other big changes. little known affect from spanish flu plauge. it most likely was a big reason ww1 ended. and for sure was the reason millions of properties in world installed radiators (thought the air was cleaner v. existing wood and coal heat…………….)
xbizo
xbizo
3 years ago
“With consumer spending falling off the cliff, how long will jobs stay strong? Strong enough to prevent a recession that history suggests has already started?”
That is the right question. Around here, professional services is still seriously short people. Restaurants still short people, but not seriously short. Business is down though. Construction seems fine. IT is fine.
It’s just inflation taking a huge bite out of household income around here. More burgers and fewer steaks. Professional fees going up 10%. Wage pressure easing, but still over 10% higher than a couple years ago.
Seems like the reactive wave of price increases are upon us and inflation is still over 7%. Nobody losing income. If they want to be employed, they are. Folks still have a good six months of stimulus savings to spend. GDP should be down, and continuing down, but not showing in the numbers because inflation is understated. Have a job and money in the bank but business is down in real terms. Is that a recession?
TechLover
TechLover
3 years ago
Reply to  xbizo
Good synopsis.
It is not a recession, yet. If the savings rate keeps going down and the accumulated savings vanish (likely in six months time), look out for the bottom to fall out by year end.
I believe the transition from everyone being happy and well fed to recession will be faster than usual this time around and will catch many people off guard.
OTOH, if unemployment doesn’t go above 5% (as Mish forecasts), the recession may be fairly shallow.
Jack
Jack
3 years ago
Reply to  TechLover
Restaurants still really busy around here. Servers still expecting 20-30% tips.

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