This page has been archived and commenting is disabled.

US Manufacturing PMI Stagnates at 2-Year Low With Weakest Employment Since June 2013

Tyler Durden's picture




 

Given the fact that for the first time since the recession, manufacturing has added zero jobs this year, that ADP just saw a drop in manufacturing jobs, Markit reports September US Manufacturing PMI has stagnated for the last 2 months at 2 year lows (printing 53.1 final vs 53.0 prelim). Worst still, and confirming even further the demise of the US manufacturing "renaissance", the Employment sub-index dropped to 50.8 - the lowest since June 2013. As Markit sums up"The Fed is therefore likely to keep an open mind as to whether tighter policy is appropriate given current economic conditions and await a clearer idea of the health of the economy in the fourth quarter." On a side note Canadian manufacturing PMI printed at a post-recession low.

Manufacturers indicated another slowdown in employment growth during September, with survey respondents citing the uncertain business outlook and reduced pressure on capacity. Moreover, the latest rise in staffing levels was the slowest in the current 27-month period of expansion.

 

 

September data also highlighted ongoing caution in terms of stock levels, with post-production inventories falling for a second month running.

The headline print remains stagnant at 2 year lows...

 

Commenting on the final PMI data, Chris Williamson, chief economist at Markit said:
The US manufacturing sector has seen a distinct loss of growth momentum in recent months, endured the worst performance for two years during the third quarter. Headwinds include the rising dollar, weak demand in global markets, a downturn in business investment and financial market jitters.
 
We must remember, however, that the manufacturing sector only accounts for around one-tenth of the economy, and robust service sector data – as indicated by last week’s flash PMI results – indicate that the wider economy remains in good health, albeit with signs that businesses have become more worried about the outlook. The survey data suggest that the economy continued to grow at a 2.2% annualised rate in the third quarter and added 207,000 jobs in September.
 
“The manufacturing slowdown therefore will be insufficient on its own to deter the Fed from hiking rates later this year, but adds a warning light that the pace of economic growth is set to slow as we move into the final quarter of the year. The Fed is therefore likely to keep an open mind as to whether tighter policy is appropriate given current economic conditions and await a clearer idea of the health of the economy in the fourth quarter.”
Charts: Bloomberg

 

 

- advertisements -

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.
Thu, 10/01/2015 - 10:01 | 6615616 Rodders75
Rodders75's picture

Let's party like it's 2008

Thu, 10/01/2015 - 11:00 | 6615860 Pool Shark
Pool Shark's picture

 

 

"Given the fact that for the first time since the recession..."

 

When exactly did we 'leave' the recession?

Thu, 10/01/2015 - 11:46 | 6616058 Mostly Harmless
Mostly Harmless's picture

Exactly!  MSM has spent years telling us about how the Economy or Manufacturing is adding jobs, but the hell if I can figure out where they are getting these magical numbers.  What companies are actually hiring and where is all this manufacturing supposedly taking place?

Thu, 10/01/2015 - 10:03 | 6615629 stant
stant's picture

Can't afford a cheeseburger

Thu, 10/01/2015 - 10:06 | 6615639 ebworthen
ebworthen's picture

What is it we still make?  Toilets?  Soda and Chips?

What manufacturing renaissance?  Baseball bats?

Thu, 10/01/2015 - 11:02 | 6615866 Pool Shark
Pool Shark's picture

 

 

Are you kidding?

We make medicines that sell for $750 a pill...

 

Thu, 10/01/2015 - 10:06 | 6615642 TeamDepends
TeamDepends's picture

Greg Mannarino is probably right: The Fed will not raise rates near term, but will telegraph they might do so. This will cause "markets" to sell off each time. Then, they will finally raise .25 to get to the full correction. In other words, controlled demolition.

Thu, 10/01/2015 - 10:13 | 6615666 youngman
youngman's picture

Car sales thru the roof...go figure....

Thu, 10/01/2015 - 10:38 | 6615771 homebody
homebody's picture

I figure Zero down and payments over 84 months - the rest are bougth by the 1% and the government

 

How to build a stronger country - BS

Thu, 10/01/2015 - 10:14 | 6615672 minority
minority's picture

"Wider economy" is the service sector ... That's why the US economy is fucked.

Thu, 10/01/2015 - 13:37 | 6616694 SmittyinLA
SmittyinLA's picture

why would anybody manufacturer anything in a place where moving offshore to manufacture anything of any size would make you an instant millionaire off the energy savings alone?

America has a huge energy handicap imposed by the state, and it's getting bigger making America less efficient, bigger the trade deficit the more immigration, more immigration more Socialist greenenergy, more greenenergy larger handicap.

The greenenergy E-Waste pile be growing, who wants moar?

Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site!