Bangkok Post

US services sector activity slowed in July as new orders dropped to their lowest level in three years.

New orders hit three-year low

- LUCIA MUTIKANI

WASHINGTON: US services sector activity slowed in July as new orders dropped to their lowest level in three years, suggesting the economy lost further momentum early in the third quarter.

The report from the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) added to last week’s data showing a slowdown in hiring and prolonged weakness in manufactur­ing in July.

These reports, together with an escalation in the trade war between the United States and China, suggest the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates gain next month to sustain the 10-year economic expansion, the longest in history.

The US central bank last week cut its short-term rate citing rising risks to the economy from trade tensions and weakening global growth.

“The trade war was already inflicting damage to the economy, and now it has been ramped up,” said Jennifer Lee, a senior economist at BMO Capital Markets in Toronto. “The Fed will step in again, likely in October but possibly sooner, but there is only so much already-low rates can do.”

The ISM said its non-manufactur­ing activity index fell 1.4 percentage points to a reading of 53.7. It was the second straight monthly decline in the index.

A reading above 50 indicates expansion in the sector, which accounts for more than two-thirds of US economic activity.

Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the services index would slip to a reading of 55.5 in July.

“Although the reading is consistent with the decelerati­on that we have been anticipati­ng for some time with the waning of fiscal stimulus and tighter financial conditions, the weaker-than-expected reading hints that tepid growth in the tradeexpos­ed goods sector may be spilling into domestic demand,” said Jonathan Millar, an economist at Barclays.

The economy grew at a 2.1% annualised rate in the second quarter, down from a 3.1% pace in the January-March quarter. Growth estimates for the third quarter are around a 1.5% rate.

The ISM described the pace of growth in the services sector as continuing “to cool off, noting “ongoing concerns related to tariffs and employment resources.”

The ISM’s services sector measure of new orders fell to a reading of 54.1 last month, its lowest since August 2016, from 55.8 in June. A gauge of new export orders dropped to 53.5 in July from a reading of 55.5 in June.

There was also a further decelerati­on in prices paid for materials and services, pointing to benign inflation. But a measure of services industry employment increased to a reading of 56.2 in July from 55.0 June. This suggests job growth will likely remain solid, even though the pace of hiring is slowing.

The economy created 164,000 jobs in July, pulling back from the 193,000 positions added in June, the government reported on Friday.

According to the ISM, 13 non-manufactur­ing industries reported growth in July, including accommodat­ion and food services, utilities and profession­al. The five industries reporting a decline included retail trade, wholesale trade and educationa­l services.

The constructi­on industry said “tariffs continue to push costs higher, and customers are looking for more discounts due to mortgage rate fluctuatio­ns. Respondent­s in the public administra­tion sector described demand as “strong” but also complained about “pressures for skilled labour.”

While a separate survey from data firm Markit offered an upbeat assessment of the non-manufactur­ing industry in July, service providers were less optimistic about the future.

“With trade tensions escalating over the past few days since the end of July, we think further weakening in business sentiment is likely, although upcoming policy actions remain uncertain,” said Daniel Silver, an economist at JPMorgan in New York.

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