The Mercury News Weekend

Factories grew at slowest pace in 2 years

Some complainin­g about impact from Trump’s trade policies

- By Paul Wiseman

American factories grew last month at the slowest pace in more than two years, with some manufactur­ers complainin­g about the impact of President Donald Trump’s contentiou­s trade policies.

The Institute for Supply Man- agement, an associatio­n of purchasing managers, said Thursday that its manufactur­ing index dropped to 54.1 in December, down from 59.3 in November and the lowest level since November 2016. Anything above 50 signals growth, and American manufactur­ing has been on a 28-month winning streak.

Still, the December drop — the biggest in a decade — was worse than economists had expected.

New orders, production and factory hiring all grew at a slower pace last month. Eleven of 18 manufactur­ing industries reported growth in December, led by textile mills and apparel makers.

Several respondent­s cited higher costs and uncertaint­y arising from Trump’s import taxes on steel, aluminum and hundreds of Chinese products. At the same time, the Chinese economy — the world’s second-biggest — is decelerati­ng.

“This is grim,” said Ian Shepherdso­n, chief economist at Pantheon Macroecono­mics, said in a research note, adding that “the story here is that the trade war, coupled with China’s underlying slowdown, is wreaking havoc in

both countries.”

Overall, the U.S. economy looks healthy. At 3.7 percent, the unemployme­nt rate is near a 50-year low. Growth clocked in at a brisk annual pace of 3.4 percent from July through September.

But the stock market has been tumbling since early October on fears that the U.S. economic expansion — the second-longest in his- tory — could sputter this year or next. The Dow Jones industrial average was down more than 600 points in midmorning trading, partly on news that iPhone maker Apple is struggling in China.

The U.S. is set to resume trade talks with China this month. If they fail to produce a deal, the U.S. is set to raise tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese imports in March. Some businesses have been reluctant to invest until they see what happens to U.S.-China trade relations.

“There’s a lot of uncertaint­y,” said Timothy Fiore, chair of ISM’s manufactur­ing survey committee. “Things just aren’t getting resolved. The thing that businesses hate is uncertaint­y, and we’ve got a ton of it.”

 ?? TONY DEJAK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? New orders, production and factory hiring all grew at a slower pace last month, making the December drop worse than economists expected.
TONY DEJAK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES New orders, production and factory hiring all grew at a slower pace last month, making the December drop worse than economists expected.

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