Morning Sun

Factories grew last month at fastest pace since 2018

- By Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON » American factories grew in December at the fastest pace in more than two years as manufactur­ing continued to weather the pandemic better than the battered services sector.

The Institute for Supply Management reported Tuesday that its gauge of manufactur­ing activity rose to 60.7% last month, the highest reading since it stood at 60.8 in August 2018. The gauge was up 3.2 percentage points from a November level of 57.5.

Any reading above 50 indicates expansion in the manufactur­ing sector.

The U. S. economy collapsed from April through June but since that time manufactur­ing has posted solid gains, while the services sector, which includes restaurant­s, bars and the travel industry, has been harder hit.

General Motors reported Tuesday that sales jumped 5% in the final quarter of 2020, its best fourth- quarter performanc­e in retail sales since 2007 with deliveries up 12%. Toyota, which has U. S. plants in Georgetown, Ky., Blue Springs, Miss., San Antonio, Texas, and elsewhere, said sales spiked 20% in December.

While manufactur­ing has recovered since spring, Timothy Fiore, chair of the ISM manufactur­ing committee, said that it continues to face virus-related headwinds such as factory shutdowns needed to sanitize facilities and difficulti­es in hiring new workers as the virus again surges in the U.S.

Ford’s factories are running at about 98% of capacity by using temporary workers as backups for employees who stay home due to virus exposure or symptoms, said Gary Johnson, Ford’s chief manufactur­ing officer. Like other automakers, Ford has also had temporary production interrupti­ons due to parts shortages from supply companies whose plants have been hit by the virus.

Rubeela Farooqi, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics, said that activity at U.S. factories in coming months would be exposed to “broadening containmen­t measures that could disrupt and weigh on demand in the U.S. and abroad.”

GM said its retail sales to individual buyers began to recover in May and reached pre-pandemic levels during the fourth quarter. Fleet sales are still down sharply, especially to rental car companies.

The worry is that a resurgent virus could hit manufactur­ers where they have been thriving.

 ?? DETROIT NEWS VIA AP, FILE ?? Ford’s factories are running at about 98% of capacity by using temporary workers as backups for employees who stay home due to virus exposure or symptoms.
DETROIT NEWS VIA AP, FILE Ford’s factories are running at about 98% of capacity by using temporary workers as backups for employees who stay home due to virus exposure or symptoms.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Machines work on a Ford vehicle assembly line at Ford’s Chicago Assembly Plant in Chicago.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Machines work on a Ford vehicle assembly line at Ford’s Chicago Assembly Plant in Chicago.

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