A
report from the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) showed on Wednesday the
U.S. manufacturing sector’s activity continued to grow in August at a slightly
stronger pace than in July.
The
ISM's index of manufacturing activity came in at 59.9 percent last month, up 0.4
percentage point from an unrevised July reading of 59.5 percent. The August reading pointed to the expansion
in the manufacturing sector for the 15th straight month but at the weakest pace
since January.
Economists'
had forecast the indicator to drop to 58.6 percent.
A
reading above 50 percent indicates expansion, while a reading below 50 percent
indicates contraction.
According
to the report, the New Orders Index increased 1.8 percentage points to 66.7 percent
in August, while the Production Index rose 1.6 percentage points to 60.0 percent,
the Backlog of Orders Index went up 3.2 percentage points to 68.2 percent and the
Inventories Index surged 5.3 percentage points to 54.2 percent. Meanwhile, the
Employment Index fell 3.9 percentage points to 49.0 percent, pointing to contraction
and the Supplier Deliveries Index dropped 3.0 percentage points to 69.5 percent.
On the price front, the Prices Index declined 6.3 percentage points to 79.4 percent;
this marked its first drop below 80 percent since December 2020.
Timothy
R. Fiore, Chair of the ISM Manufacturing Business Survey Committee, noted that
the Survey Committee members reported that their companies and suppliers
continued to struggle to meet increasing demand levels. “All segments of the
manufacturing economy are impacted by record-long raw-materials lead times,
continued shortages of critical basic materials, rising commodities prices and
difficulties in transporting products,” he said. “The new surges of COVID-19
are adding to pandemic-related issues - worker absenteeism, short-term
shutdowns due to parts shortages, difficulties in filling open positions and
overseas supply chain problems - that continue to limit manufacturing-growth
potential. However, optimistic panel sentiment remained strong, with eight
positive comments for every cautious comment.”
Fiore
also noted that the past relationship between the PMI and the overall economy
indicated that the PMI for August (59.9 percent) corresponds to a 4.8-percent
increase in real gross domestic product (GDP) on an annualized basis.