Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

U.S. manufactur­ing ends 5-month losing streak

- By Josh Boak

WASHINGTON >> U.S. manufactur­ers expanded in March, ending a five-month streak of declining factory activity.

The Institute for Supply Management said Friday that its manufactur­ing index rose to 51.8 last month from49.5 in February. Any reading above 50 signals growth.

The increase suggests that U.S. factories are adapting to the turmoil abroad, where a stronger dollar and weakening economies in China, Japan and elsewhere have hurt sales. But the details of the survey-based report were somewhat uneven. New orders and production improved, but the measure of employment at manufactur­ers contracted in a sign that factories are letting workers go.

“Manufactur­ing activity is stabilizin­g,” said Joshua Shapiro, chief U.S. economist at the forecaster, MFR.

Still, Shapiro noted that “dollar strength and weak growth inmany important internatio­nal markets are going to continue to weigh on U.S. producers, and we expect the recovery in the manufactur­ing sector in the months ahead to be a muted one.”

The setback in employment meshed with the government jobs report released separately on Friday, which showed that manufactur­ers shed 29,000 workers in March and 18,000 in February, in an otherwise healthy jobmarket anchored by improving demand for homes, health care, and meals at restaurant­s.

Of the 18 industries in the ISM report, a dozen reported growth. Factories in primary metals, food, electronic­s and plastics and rubber products, among others, viewed conditions as improving.

Other manufactur­ing indicators have created a hazy outlook for the sector.

U.S. manufactur­ing output rose 0.5 percent in January, as auto, furniture and food production advanced, the Federal Reserve reported earlier this month. But the Commerce Department found in a separate report a stiff 2.8 percent decline during February in orders for long-lasting, durable goods.

Falling demand from overseas customers has roiled the manufactur­ing sector.

 ?? JESSICA REILLY — TELEGRAPH HERALD VIA AP, FILE ?? Rick Ring, left, and Corinne Schmitt‑Bries attach a panel to a John Deere 1050K Crawler Dozer at John Deere Dubuque Works in Dubuque, Iowa.
JESSICA REILLY — TELEGRAPH HERALD VIA AP, FILE Rick Ring, left, and Corinne Schmitt‑Bries attach a panel to a John Deere 1050K Crawler Dozer at John Deere Dubuque Works in Dubuque, Iowa.

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