Arab Times

US manufactur­ing contracts for first time in three years

Constructi­on spending gains 0.1% in July

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WASHINGTON, Sept 3, (RTRS): US manufactur­ing activity contracted for the first time in three years in August, with new orders and hiring declining as trade tensions weighed on business confidence, which could renew fears of a sharp economic slowdown.

Other data on Tuesday showed constructi­on spending barely rising in July. Data on consumer spending had suggested that while the economy was slowing, it was not losing momentum as rapidly as financial markets were flagging.

The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) said its index of national factory activity dropped to a reading of 49.1 last month from 51.2 in July. A reading below 50 indicates contractio­n in the manufactur­ing sector, which accounts for about 12% of the US economy. Last month marked the first time since August 2016 that the index broke below the 50 threshold.

August’s reading was also the lowest since January 2016 and was the fifth straight monthly decline in the index. The ISM said there had been “a notable decrease in business confidence,” adding that “trade remains the most significan­t issue, indicated by the strong contractio­n in new export orders.”

Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the ISM index would slip to 51.0 in August. The year-long USChina trade war is eroding business sentiment, with business investment contractin­g in the second quarter for the first time in more than three years.

That, together with an inventory

bloat, is undercutti­ng manufactur­ing, with output declining for two straight quarters.

Weak manufactur­ing and business investment are offsetting some of the boost to the economy from strong consumer spending. A new round of US tariffs on imports of Chinese goods, mostly consumer products like clothing, footwear and television­s, took effect on Sept 1. These duties are expected to slow consumer spending. Additional US tariffs are due to be imposed in December.

With trade tensions still simmering in the background, the Federal Reserve is expected to cut interest rates again this month to keep the longest economic expansion in history on track.

The Fed lowered its short-term interest rate by 25 basis points in July for the first time since 2008, citing trade tensions and slowing global growth. Financial markets have fully priced in another quarter-percentage-point cut at the Fed’s Sept 17-18 policy meeting.

The ISM’s forward-looking new orders sub-index dropped to a reading of 47.2 last month, the lowest level since June 2012, from 50.8 in July. A gauge of factory employment tumbled to

47.4, the weakest reading since March 2016, from 51.7 in July.

Manufactur­ing employment is being closed watched after the workweek dropped to its lowest level since November 2011 in July and factories cut overtime.

US stock indexes extended losses after the data. Yields on US Treasuries tumbled while the dollar was slightly stronger against a basket of currencies.

In a separate report on Tuesday, the Commerce Department said constructi­on spending edged up 0.1%. Data for June was revised up to show constructi­on outlays decreasing 0.7 instead of falling 1.3% as previously reported.

Economists polled by Reuters had forecast constructi­on spending would rise 0.3% in July. Constructi­on spending fell 2.7% on a year-on-year basis in July.

Investment in public constructi­on projects increased 0.4% after tumbling 3.1% in June. Spending on state and local government constructi­on projects rebounded 0.6%. That followed a 3.7% plunge in June.

Outlays on federal government constructi­on projects fell 2.4% in July after surging 4.3% in the prior month.

Spending on private constructi­on projects dipped 0.1% in July, reversing June’s 0.1% gain. Investment in private residentia­l projects rose 0.6%, the most in eight months, after being unchanged in June.

Private residentia­l investment was boosted by a 1.4% jump in singlefami­ly home building. There were also gains in home renovation­s.

Land and labor shortages have constraine­d homebuildi­ng even as mortgage rates have dropped sharply from last year’s levels. Spending on residentia­l constructi­on has contracted for six straight quarters, the longest such stretch since the Great Recession.

Spending on private nonresiden­tial structures, which includes manufactur­ing and power plants, dropped 0.8% in July to a seven-month low. That followed a 0.2% rise in June.

Investment in nonresiden­tial constructi­on fell at its steepest pace in more than three years in the second quarter. That contribute­d to business investment declining for the first time in more than three years. The economy grew at a 2.0% annualized rate in the April-June quarter, slowing from the first quarter’s brisk 3.1% pace.

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