The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Manufactur­ing contracts last month in US, world

- By Paul Wiseman

WASHINGTON » Manufactur­ing contracted in the United States and around the world last month, dragged down by economic fallout from the coronaviru­s outbreak.

The Institute for Supply Management, an associatio­n of purchasing managers, reported Wednesday that its U.S. manufactur­ing index fell to 49.1 in March after registerin­g 50.1 in February. Any reading below 50 signals a contractio­n. The index had signaled growth in January and February.

Also Wednesday J.P. Morgan reported that global manufactur­ing shrank in March. Its worldwide manufactur­ing index registered 47.6 in March. That was a slight improvemen­t on February’s 47.1 — but only because Chinese factories began ramping back up last month after being locked down in February to counter

COVID-19. Excluding China, J.P. Morgan found, global manufactur­ing dropped to the lowest level last month since May 2009 at the depths of the Great Recession.

Economists had expected a bigger drop in the U.S. index. Timothy Fiore, chair of ISM manufactur­ing index committee, said that “things got worse” as March dragged on and predicted that the index will signal more weakness in April. New orders and factory employment fell last month to the lowest level since 2009. Production and export orders also fell.

The COVID-19 pandemic and the quarantine­s, travel restrictio­ns and business closings imposed to combat it have hammered global manufactur­ers, disrupting access to supplies and crushing demand for products.

But the impact of the outbreak is falling even harder on service businesses such as restaurant­s and hotels.

“Manufactur­ing is not, for the most part, in the very front line of the virus hit, but nonetheles­s large swathes of the sector are vulnerable as consumers cut back on spending on goods, especially big-ticket items like cars and trucks,” Ian Shephardso­n, chief economist at Pantheon Macroecono­mics, wrote in a research report, adding that “while this headline ISM reading is a pleasant-looking surprise, don’t be fooled.”

Ten of 18 U.S. industries surveyed reported growth in March, but six contracted, led by energy companies, coal producers and textile mills.

Already weakened by President Donald Trump’s trade war with China, manufactur­ers around the world are reeling from COVID-19 and its economic impact. J.P. Morgan reported that its manufactur­ing index for the 19 European countries that share the euro currency dropped last month to the lowest level in nearly eight years. Confidence among eurozone manufactur­ers fell to a record low.

Manufactur­ing in the Philippine­s dropped to the lowest level on record as authoritie­s locked down Luzon, the country’s biggest and most populous island, to combat COVID-19. J.P. Morgan also reported that Italy, the Czech Republic and Vietnam registered especially deep manufactur­ing contractio­ns last month.

 ?? CARLOS OSORIO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Robots weld the bed of a Ford F-150truck at an assembly plant in Dearborn, Mich., in this 2018photo. Ford says it wants to reopen five North American assembly plants that were closed due to the threat of coronaviru­s.
CARLOS OSORIO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Robots weld the bed of a Ford F-150truck at an assembly plant in Dearborn, Mich., in this 2018photo. Ford says it wants to reopen five North American assembly plants that were closed due to the threat of coronaviru­s.

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