The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Manufactur­ing jumps to 3-year high in February

- By Martin Crutsinger

U.S. manufactur­ing expanded in February at the fastest pace three years with the arrival of a surge in new orders.

The Institute for Supply Management reported Monday that its gauge of manufactur­ing activity rose to a reading of 60.8% last month, 2.1 percentage-points above the January level of 58.7%.

It was the strongest performanc­e since February 2018. Any reading above 50 indicates expansion in the manufactur­ing sector.

The 60.8% reading last month matched a similar reading in February 2018 and the level in those months was the highest since a reading of 61.4% in May 2004.

The survey found optimism increasing with five positive comments for every cautious comment, up from a 3-to-1 ratio in the January survey.

Timothy Fiore, chair of the ISM manufactur­ing survey panel, said the survey shows that a recovery is ongoing as manufactur­ers find ways to deal with supply-chain shortages and lingering pandemic issues such as short-term shutdowns at some plants to sanitize facilities.

Manufactur­ers are also benefiting from a shift in spending, with Americans spending money on homes and other projects rather than going out to restaurant­s or shopping indoors, Fiore said.

“They are buying all kinds of items that the manufactur­ing economy builds,” he said. “As long as parts of the services sector are shut down, Americans are spending on hard goods.

The index for new orders rose to 64.8%, up from 61.1% in January, while the employment index stood at 54.4%, up from 52.6% in January, the report found.

However, manufactur­ers are having to wrestle with lengthenin­g delivery times for components at many factories. Michael Pearce, a senior economist at Capital Economics, said that reflected in part “increasing global shortages of electronic­s and in particular semiconduc­tors.” He said these shortages could hold back the recovery in manufactur­ing output in coming months.

Last week, President Joe Biden signed an executive order intended to boost manufactur­ing jobs by strengthen­ing U.S. supply chains for advanced batteries, pharmaceut­icals, critical minerals and semiconduc­tors.

A widening global shortage of semiconduc­tors for auto parts is forcing major auto companies to halt or slow vehicle production just as they were recovering from pandemic-related factory shutdowns.

“The comments in the report also make it crystal clear that these shortages go well beyond just semiconduc­tors with firms in every sector reporting shortages and problems with suppliers keeping up with demand,” Pearce said.

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