Royal Oak Tribune

U.S. factories grew more slowly last month; index dips to 57.5

-

WASHINGTON » American factories grew at a slower pace last month and there are concerns that surging coronaviru­s infections will endanger an economic recovery.

The Institute of Supply Management, an associatio­n of purchasing managers, reported Tuesday that its manufactur­ing index dipped to 57.5 in November from 59.3 in October. Any reading above 50 signals that manufactur­ing is expanding. The ISM index plunged in the spring but has since bounced back and now shows factories on a sixmonth winning streak.

New orders and production grew more slowly last month. Hiring actually dropped, reversing a gain in October. New export orders grew faster. Sixteen of 18 industries surveyed reported growth last month, led by apparel and mineral manufactur­ers.

The U.S. economy collapsed from April through June and has since been recovering. But a sharp increase in infections is raising fears that the recovery will lose momentum as state and local government­s issue lockdown orders and Americans stay home on their own to avoid infection.

“For now, the manufactur­ing sector appears to be weathering another round of virus outbreaks fairly well,” Rubeela Farooqi, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics, wrote in a research note. “However, the outlook is uncertain given targeted restrictio­ns and shutdowns, at home and abroad, could disrupt activity and weigh on demand.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States