The Mercury News

US manufactur­ing growth slows in June for third straight month

- By Christophe­r Rugaber

WASHINGTON — U.S. factory activity grew at a slower pace in June for the third straight month as measures of new orders and inventorie­s fell.

The Institute for Supply Management, an associatio­n of purchasing managers, said Monday that its manufactur­ing index slipped to 51.7 last month from 52.1 in May. Any reading above 50 signals an expansion.

While the sector is still growing, the report pointed to an ongoing weakening in U.S. manufactur­ing. Trade fights with China, Europe and Mexico, as well as an increase in the dollar’s value, have cut into U.S. exports and increased uncertaint­y for American manufactur­ers.

A measure of new orders dropped to 50, which means they were unchanged. Manufactur­ers are also holding fewer supplies, a sign they are worried that demand could slow further.

“It’s concerning,” said Tim Fiore, chair of the ISM’s manufactur­ing survey committee. “This is going down faster than I would like.”

The ISM surveys purchasing managers at manufactur­ing firms, nearly half of whom said that trade policy was negatively affecting their businesses in some way.

“Tariffs are causing an increase in the cost of goods, meaning U.S. consumers are paying more for products,” a chemical manufactur­er told the ISM.

A measure of new export orders was just 50.5, suggesting overseas demand is barely growing. Overall order backlogs are also shrinking, and customers’ inventorie­s, while still declining, are doing so more slowly. When manufactur­ers’ customers hold larger stockpiles, that means they order fewer goods from factories.

There were some positive signs: Production and employment increased at a faster pace in June.

President Donald Trump has postponed two of his largest, most recent tariff threats, but that hasn’t fully removed the threat to manufactur­ers. He agreed over the weekend to hold more trade talks with China, rather than impose import taxes on $300 billion of Chinese imports. He also delayed an across-theboard 25% duty on all imports from Mexico, which he threatened to impose in May.

Yet those threats still loom and are forcing many manufactur­ers to rethink their supply chains.

 ?? AMR ALFIKY — ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? The White House has postponed two of the largest, most recent tariff threats, but that hasn’t fully removed the threat to manufactur­ers, forcing them to rethink supply chains.
AMR ALFIKY — ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES The White House has postponed two of the largest, most recent tariff threats, but that hasn’t fully removed the threat to manufactur­ers, forcing them to rethink supply chains.

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