The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Factories in the US rebound in June

- By Matt Ott

SILVER SPRING, MD. » U.S. manufactur­ing rebounded in June as major parts of the country opened back up, ending three months of contractio­n in the sector caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The Institute for Supply Management, an associatio­n of purchasing managers, said Wednesday that its manufactur­ing index rose to 52.6 last month after registerin­g 43.1 in May and 41.5 in April. Any reading below 50 signals that U.S. manufactur­ers are contractin­g.

New orders, production, hiring and new export orders all jumped in June, after they all declined in May but at a slower pace than in April.

“As predicted, the growth cycle has returned after three straight months of COVID-19 disruption­s,” said Timothy Fiore, chair of ISM manufactur­ing index committee. “Demand, consumptio­n and inputs are reaching parity and are positioned for a demand-driven expansion cycle as we enter the second half of the year.”

However, just as the June numbers reflect the broader economic improvemen­ts as major parts of the country opened up for business, a spike in coronaviru­s cases in high-population states like California, Florida and Texas is a cause for concern.

Gregory Daco, chief economist at Oxford Economics, said that while the June report was positive, weak demand, lingering supply chain disruption­s and high uncertaint­y, among other factors, could make for a sluggish recovery.

“Further, with the number of coronaviru­s cases now rising in many parts of the country, including several states where manufactur­ing activity is concentrat­ed, the nascent recovery risks being curtailed by the reimpositi­on of lockdowns,” Daco said.

Of the 18 manufactur­ing industries 13 reported growth in June. Among the six biggest industry sectors, food, beverage and tobacco performed the best, while computer and electronic­s and chemical returned to growth. Transporta­tion equipment and fabricated metal products still contracted, “but at much softer levels,” Fiore said.

Comments from the panel in this month’s survey were more positive than cautious, reversing the trend that started in March when the coronaviru­s outbreak effectivel­y shuttered the U.S. economy.

Last week, the Commerce Department reported that orders to American factories for big-ticket goods rebounded by more than expected last month as the U.S. economy began to slowly reopen. Orders for manufactur­ed goods meant to last at least three years shot up 15.8% in May after plunging 18.1% in April and 16.7% in March as the global economy came to a standstill.

Manufactur­ing was slumping even before the virus outbreak paralyzed the economy in March. The ISM manufactur­ing index has signaled contractio­n in eight of the last 11 months. President Donald Trump’s trade war with China had raised costs and created uncertaint­y that curbed investment, causing the world economy to lose some momentum.

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 ?? CARLOS OSORIO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ford Motor Co. employees work a ventilator at the Rawsonvill­e plant in Ypsilanti Township, Mich., in this May file photo. The plant was converted into a ventilator factory, as hospitals battling the coronaviru­s report shortages of the life-saving devices. According to the Institute for Supply Management, U.S. manufactur­ing is rebounding as major parts of the country opened back up.
CARLOS OSORIO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ford Motor Co. employees work a ventilator at the Rawsonvill­e plant in Ypsilanti Township, Mich., in this May file photo. The plant was converted into a ventilator factory, as hospitals battling the coronaviru­s report shortages of the life-saving devices. According to the Institute for Supply Management, U.S. manufactur­ing is rebounding as major parts of the country opened back up.

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