Houston Chronicle

More Texas firms report declining sales

- By Mitchell Schnurman DALLAS MORNING NEWS

The Texas economy slowed last month with fewer service companies reporting increases in revenue and more manufactur­ers reporting declines in new orders, according to surveys by the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.

August was the third consecutiv­e month that declines in new orders surpassed increases among manufactur­ing firms surveyed by the Dallas Fed.

The survey results are the latest signs foreshadow­ing a potential slowdown in the Texas economy. The state recovered all the jobs lost in the pandemic late last year, well ahead of most states and the nation, and Texas has been expanding ever since.

In comments to the Dallas Fed, many executives cited the impact of inflation and the pandemic’s continuing challenges in the workplace.

“We can only charge guests so much for a meal, but our costs for everything are skyrocketi­ng,” said a restaurant executive, who added that property and liability insurance rates had increased 130 percent. “This is unsustaina­ble.”

In general, staff productivi­ty remains low, said the leader of a profession­al and technical services company. “We are still having difficulty picking up the pace to pre-pandemic levels,” the executive said. We are “seeing many more requests for time off and interrupti­ons to deal with personal, family or child care problems.”

“Increasing interest rates and capital costs are crushing margins,” said a real estate company leader. “Revenue, though increasing, is not at the same pace as expenses.”

Just over 30 percent of Texas service firms said August sales were higher than July’s, a slightly smaller share than the previous two months. Over 23 percent said August sales were lower — the highest negative score on that measure since January.

Labor market indicators softened last month with fewer service companies reporting an increase in hiring. And average hours worked increased at the slowest pace since early 2021.

“We’re seeing signs of slowing, but we’re still growing,” said Christophe­r Slijk, an associate economist at the Dallas Fed. “Manufactur­ing is coming in much weaker and there are not a lot of new orders. But the service sector is still hanging in there.

“Nothing really suggests a recession — that we’re in one or that it’s necessaril­y on the horizon,” Slijk said.

Many businesses are worried about a downturn, and some are reducing hiring plans or even imposing layoffs. One restaurant executive said growth was strong earlier in the year but sales had plateaued since June.

“Are we beginning to feel the talked-about recession? Hard to tell — hope not,” the restaurant exec told the Dallas Fed.

The steady decline in manufactur­ing orders may be part of a broader recovery from the pandemic. In the early months of COVID, when workers were staying home for safety, they bought lots of goods, which led to an expansion in manufactur­ing. As more people were vaccinated and the health threat eased, they started flocking to services again.

“There was really a shift in consumer spending,” said Daniel Altman, chief economist at Instawork, a platform that connects workers with temporary assignment­s in restaurant­s, hotels and more. “People decided they were going to go out and consume services, and we saw strong increases in pay for roles in leisure and hospitalit­y. But that started to tail off in the last month or so.”

Supply-chain problems, which have persisted through much of the pandemic, appear to be easing. In August, 58.5 percent of respondent­s reported supplychai­n disruption­s. That’s down from nearly 65 percent in May, according to the Dallas Fed.

“If we keep easing these supply constraint­s, that will grease the gears a bit so the economy keeps running more smoothly,” Slijk said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States