Kuwait Times

US manufactur­ing activity crawls off an 11-year low

Constructi­on spending falls 2.9% in April New orders, employment measures up

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WASHINGTON: US manufactur­ing activity eased off an 11-year low in May, the strongest sign yet that the worst of the economic downturn was behind as businesses reopen, though the recovery from the COVID-19 crisis could take years because of high unemployme­nt.

The promising signs of stabilizat­ion in manufactur­ing reported by the Institute for Supply Management on Monday are a welcome respite as the country braces for data on Friday expected to show the worst unemployme­nt rate since World War Two. Rampant joblessnes­s will lead to tepid demand and economic growth. “Today’s report on the manufactur­ing sector represents good news that hints the economy is turning the corner as the states reopened in May,” said Chris Rupkey, chief economist at MUFG in New York. “It will not be a quick recovery for sure, but at least the worst is over.”

The ISM said its index of national factory activity rose to a reading of 43.1 last month from 41.5 in April, which was the lowest level since April 2009. A reading below 50 indicates contractio­n in manufactur­ing, which accounts for 11 percent of the US economy. May marked the third straight monthly contractio­n.

Still, the first increase in the ISM index since January mirrored improvemen­ts in regional manufactur­ing surveys in May and suggested April was the nadir for economic activity. A survey on Monday from data firm IHS Markit also showed stabilizat­ion in manufactur­ing conditions in May. The ISM also viewed May as the “transition month,” but cautioned that “demand remains uncertain.”

The improvemen­t was not uniform. Disruption­s to the supply chain and social distancing are limiting transporta­tion equipment manufactur­ers’ ability to restart production. Food, beverage and tobacco industries were overwhelme­d, nothing that increased demand “stressed our production capabiliti­es.”

The ISM’s forward-looking new orders sub-index rose to a reading of 31.8 in May from 27.1 in April, which was the lowest since December 2008. Despite the slight improvemen­t last month, new orders at current levels suggest business investment could continue to shrink. The COVID-19 crisis has undercut corporate profits, which declined in the first quarter at rates last seen during the 2007-09 Great Recession. Business investment has contracted for four straight quarters.

Stocks on Wall Street were higher, though caution reigned amid country-wide protests over race relations and a flare-up in tensions between Washington and Beijing. The dollar fell against a basket of currencies. US Treasury prices slipped.

Bottom reached

The economy contracted at a 5 percent annualized rate in the first quarter, the worst performanc­e since the 2007-09 recession. Gross domestic product is expected to decline at a rate as sharp as 40 percent in the second quarter, which would be the biggest contractio­n in output since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

The ISM’s measure of factory employment advanced to a reading of 32.1 in May after plunging to 27.5 in the prior month, which was the lowest since February 1949. About 21.4 million jobs were lost in March and April. The Labor Department is expected to report on Friday that at least another 8 million were lost in May, with the unemployme­nt rate rocketing to 19.7 percent, according to a Reuters survey of economists. That would be the highest since the government started tracking the series in 1948, and up from 14.7 percent in April.

“Manufactur­ers are being squeezed by both a collapse in demand and disrupted supply chains,” said James Knightley, chief internatio­nal economist at ING in New York. “With profitabil­ity under immense pressure firms are increasing­ly looking to cut costs, which will limit the ability of the US economy to rebound quickly.”

A separate report from the Commerce Department on Monday showed constructi­on spending dropped 2.9 percent in April, the largest decrease since October 2018, after being unchanged in March.

Economists had forecast constructi­on spending declining 6.5 percent in April. The constructi­on sector has fared better than other segments of the economy as some large projects were likely put in place months before the COVID-19 pandemic.

In addition, many states regarded the industry as essential business, when restaurant­s and other social gathering venues were shuttered in mid-March to slow the spread of COVID-19. The industry is also being supported by near record low interest rates. In April, spending on private sector constructi­on projects dropped 3.0 percent. Outlays on homebuildi­ng tumbled 4.5 percent. Spending on nonresiden­tial structures, which include manufactur­ing plant and mining exploratio­n, shafts and wells, decreased 1.3 percent. Investment in public constructi­on projects fell 2.5 percent in April.

“Constructi­on spending can be a somewhat lagging indicator, as outlays each month in part reflect projects started in prior months,” said Nancy Vanden Houten, a senior US economist at Oxford Economics in New York. – Reuters

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 ??  ?? In this file photo, employees work on Boeing 737 MAX airplanes at the Boeing Renton Factory in Renton, Washington. US manufactur­ers are seeing the first hints of a tentative recovery but conditions for the industry were nonetheles­s terrible in May, according to an industry survey.—AFP
In this file photo, employees work on Boeing 737 MAX airplanes at the Boeing Renton Factory in Renton, Washington. US manufactur­ers are seeing the first hints of a tentative recovery but conditions for the industry were nonetheles­s terrible in May, according to an industry survey.—AFP
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