The Mercury News

Ongoing concern over trade sinks manufactur­ing index

Uncertaint­y seen as limiting anticipate­d market growth

- By Reade Pickert

A gauge of U.S. factories fell in April to the weakest level since late 2016, signaling that manufactur­ing headwinds extended into the second quarter as companies continue to confront uncertaint­y about trade.

The Institute for Supply Management index slumped to 52.8 from 55.3 the prior month, missing all estimates in Bloomberg’s survey while holding above the 50 level that signals expansion. Three of five components declined, including new orders, employment and production, according to the report Wednesday. Thirteen of 18 industries saw growth.

The data add to reasons for Federal Reserve policy makers to leave monetary policy unchanged at the conclusion of their meeting Wednesday in Washington. Treasury yields fell after the report to trade near a threeweek low. A separate report Wednesday from the Census Bureau showed constructi­on spending fell in March for the first time in four months.

“We have moved from an unsustaina­ble high level in manufactur­ing last year,” said Russell Price, chief economist at Ameriprise Financial Inc. “This year, the pace of growth will be slower, but still solidly positive.”

The unexpected decline to the lowest level of President Donald Trump’s tenure adds to signs that uncertaint­y about global trade and growth is dimming the outlook for producers across the world’s largest economy even as other measures of economic health have been looking more upbeat.

The gauge for export orders fell below 50 for the first time in three years while imports missed the threshold for the first time in two years, the latest evidence Trump’s trade wars are weighing on factories.

ISM’s employment gauge fell to near a two-year low, signaling weakness ahead of Friday’s U.S. jobs report. Still, economists expect it to show April factory hiring rose after the first drop in more than a year and a half. Separate data released Wednesday from the ADP Research Institute showed U.S. companies added the most workers since July last month.

The measure for new orders also slipped to near the weakest since 2016, indicating softer demand. At the same time, the inventorie­s gauge increased, suggesting stockpiles continue to expand, a trend that will likely eventually reverse and be a drag on growth.

“Continued trade issues are providing headwinds to the manufactur­ing economy,” Timothy Fiore, chair of ISM’s manufactur­ing survey committee, told reporters on a call Wednesday.

An index of prices paid dropped to 50, a signal that inflation pressures are likely to remain muted.

A gauge of supplier deliveries edged up to 54.6. Readings below 50 indicate faster deliveries, while those above 50 signal slowing. The customer inventorie­s index was little changed while the order backlogs gauge increased.

The main ISM manufactur­ing gauge has held above the 50 line that divides expansion and contractio­n since August 2016.

 ?? LUKE SHARRETT — BLOOMBERG NEWS ?? The Institute for Supply Management index was recorded at 52.8, down from 55.3in the prior month.
LUKE SHARRETT — BLOOMBERG NEWS The Institute for Supply Management index was recorded at 52.8, down from 55.3in the prior month.

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