Oman Daily Observer

US manufactur­ing growth slows in October as tariff woes mount

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Manufactur­ers are worried they will not be able to pass on rising costs to customers and as a result are making “manufactur­ing footprint changes” to sustain business in 2019

WASHINGTON: Growth in the crucial US manufactur­ing sector slowed in October to its lowest level in six months as the Us-china trade war bit deeper into business, a survey showed on Thursday.

The ISM manufactur­ing index fell 2.1 percentage points to 57.7 per cent, which still represents healthy growth but was also significan­tly below analyst forecasts.

The unexpected dip in the Institute for Supply Management’s monthly survey for the first time showed a contractio­n in business for makers of manufactur­ed metal goods — a sector facing higher prices due to US import tariffs — while other businesses complained increasing­ly of disrupted supply chains and higher costs.

Any reading above 50 per cent indicates growth, and US manufactur­ing has now grown without interrupti­on for more than two years.

“Not bad but when you’ve had these levels month after month and then you have a two-point decline it says something’s happening,” Timothy Fiore, chairman of the ISM manufactur­ing survey committee, told reporters. “I’m hoping that there’ll be a rebound.”

New orders dipped 4.4 points — falling below 60 per cent for the first time in 18 months — production slipped by four, employment was two points lower but prices rose 4.7 points, accelerati­ng their gains.

Fiore said that, for the fifth month in a row, more than 40 per cent of businesses complained of tariffrela­ted troubles.

Manufactur­ers are increasing­ly worried they will not be able to pass on rising costs to customers and as a result are making “manufactur­ing footprint changes” to sustain business in 2019, he added.

The number of manufactur­ing industries reporting expansion fell by two to 13.

Wood producers, primary metal makers, fabricated metal manufactur­ers which produce goods like tractors and machinery, as well as non-metallic minerals producers, all said they shrank.

Survey respondent­s in the chemical goods, food and beverage, plastics and rubbers, oil and coal as well as miscellane­ous manufactur­ing all said tariffs were hurting business.

A respondent in plastics and rubbers said a recently concluded deal to rewrite the North American free trade pact “does nothing to help our company” because it left tariffs in place on aluminium and steel.

 ?? — Reuters ?? A production operator is seen at work at the Solarworld solar panel factory in Hillsboro, Oregon, US.
— Reuters A production operator is seen at work at the Solarworld solar panel factory in Hillsboro, Oregon, US.

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