Weak U.S. PMI Signals Confirmed By Official Data

 | Jun 19, 2017 07:35

Official data showed US manufacturing output missing expectations in May, adding to a flow of recent data that point to a renewed bout of industrial weakness.

PMI survey data not only accurately predicted the downturn in industrial growth, but also revealed the underlying factors behind the slowing, notably a waning of both capex and consumer spending. The numbers therefore suggest there are downside risks to the near-term outlook for the US economy.

Industrial sector struggle

Commerce Department data indicated that factory production fell 0.4% in May. The decline was the second in the past three months, and suggests that industry is once again starting to struggle after a strong start to the year.

It’s not just output that is falling. Official staistics also showed a drop in both factory orders and the narrower gauge of durable goods orders in April, the latest month for which data are available. Meanwhile, manufacturing payrolls numbers slipped back into decline in May, dropping for the first time since last October.

By contrast, output, orders and employment had all been growing at encouragingly solid rates earlier in the year.

Production was just 0.3% higher in the three months to May compared to the prior three months period, which is the worst performance since November. This compares with a two-and-a-half year high of 0.8% in February.

Similarly, manufacturing payroll numbers has increased by some 52,000 in the three months to February – the largest gain for over two years. That rate of job creation has since more than halved. Just 21,000 jobs were added in the three months to May.

Advance PMI signals

This renewed soft patch had been indicated in advance by IHS Markit’s PMI data. Historical comparisons show close relationships between the PMI survey data and official data on output, orders and employment, with the PMI numbers available well ahead of the comparable official statistics.

The headline manufacturing index from the PMI survey had climbed to a near-two-year high of 55.0 in January, but has since lost ground. At 52.5, the May index was the lowest since last September. The survey’s output index has likewise steadily trended down from a peak in January to an eight-month low in May.