U.S. manufacturing activity remained subdued in August, continuing a period of contraction with declines in production, new orders, supplier deliveries, and export orders, according to the Institute for Supply Management (ISM). The ISM’s manufacturing index rose slightly by 0.4 percentage points to 47.2% from July, but it remained below the 50% mark, indicating ongoing contraction in the sector for the fifth consecutive month.
ISM’s Manufacturing Business Survey Committee Chair, Timothy Fiore, pointed to “subdued demand,” noting that manufacturers have been hesitant to invest in capital and inventory due to uncertainties surrounding federal monetary policy and the upcoming elections.
In a separate report, S&P Global also highlighted the sector’s challenges. The firm’s U.S. Manufacturing PMI showed a decline in production for the first time in six months. S&P Global Chief Business Economist Chris Williamson described the downturn as an additional drag on the economy, suggesting that weak demand and rising inventories were contributing to a negative outlook for production in the near future.
Manufacturers have been facing slower sales, leading to unsold stock building up in warehouses. As a result, many are reducing production levels, cutting back on inputs, and shrinking payrolls. This shift has raised concerns about future economic performance, with Williamson warning that current trends could be among the most troubling signals for manufacturing since the global financial crisis.
In response to the manufacturing data, the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta revised its Q3 economic growth estimate down to 2% annually, from 2.5% previously.
While manufacturing accounts for just 11% of U.S. economic growth, its performance has a significant impact on related sectors and serves as a key indicator for broader economic trends. According to Fiore, the ISM’s index suggests an annualized economic growth rate of 1.3%.
Despite a slowdown in inflation since the first quarter, inflationary pressures persist, especially in commodities such as oil, natural gas, aluminum, corrugated materials, freight transportation, and plastic resins.
In terms of employment, the ISM reported a slight improvement, with its employment index rising 2.6 percentage points, indicating modest prospects for workers in the manufacturing sector. However, the S&P Global PMI indicated a decline in manufacturing jobs, with companies cutting payrolls for the first time this year.
The release of the manufacturing data coincided with a decline in U.S. stock prices, with the Standard & Poor’s 500 index dropping by 2.1%.
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