Manufacturing Has Peaked This Cycle, 8 of 11 ISM Components in Contraction

ISM chart and details below by permission of the Institute for Supply Management.

Please consider the November 2022 Manufacturing ISM® Report On Business®

“Manufacturing contracted in November after expanding for 29 straight months. Panelists’ companies continue to judiciously manage hiring, other than October 2022, the month-over-month supplier delivery performance was the best since February 2012, when it registered 47 percent and material lead times declined approximately 9 percent from the prior month, approximately 18 percent over the last four months. Managing head counts and total supply chain inventories remain primary goals. Order backlogs, prices and now lead times are declining rapidly, which should bring buyers and sellers back to the table to refill order books based on 2023 business plans.”

Key Details 

  • “The November Manufacturing PMI® registered 49 percent, 1.2 percentage points lower than the 50.2 percent recorded in October. Regarding the overall economy, this figure indicates expansion for the 30th month in a row after contraction in April and May 2020. 
  • The Manufacturing PMI® figure is the lowest since May 2020, when it registered 43.5 percent. 
  • The New Orders Index remained in contraction territory at 47.2 percent, 2 percentage points lower than the 49.2 percent recorded in October. 
  • The Production Index reading of 51.5 percent is a 0.8-percentage point decrease compared to October’s figure of 52.3 percent. 
  • The Prices Index registered 43 percent, down 3.6 percentage points compared to the October figure of 46.6 percent; this is the index’s lowest reading since May 2020 (40.8 percent). 
  • The Backlog of Orders Index registered 40 percent, 5.3 percentage points lower than the October reading of 45.3 percent. 
  • The Employment Index returned to contraction territory (48.4 percent, down 1.6 percentage points) after being unchanged in October at 50 percent. 
  • The Supplier Deliveries Index reading of 47.2 percent is 0.4 percentage point higher than the October figure of 46.8 percent. Except for last month, the Supplier Deliveries Index hasn’t been at this level since February 2012 (47 percent).
  • The Inventories Index registered 50.9 percent, 1.6 percentage points lower than the October reading of 52.5 percent. 
  • The New Export Orders Index reading of 48.4 percent is up 1.9 percentage points compared to October’s figure of 46.5 percent. 
  • The Imports Index dropped into contraction territory at 46.6 percent, 4.2 percentage points below the October reading of 50.8 percent.”

Manufacturing Has Peaked

The only major component of the Manufacturing PMI® not in contraction is production. That will not last long given the collapse in domestic and export orders coupled with the backlog of orders in steep contraction.

This post originated at MishTalk.Com.

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ohno
ohno
1 year ago
Fed mandate……….full employment.
Latest Fed announcement: kill jobs to reduce inflation.
These bastards have zero interests in you or your job. Its all talk. They are all medical experts and support lockdowns as well in case you didn’t know.
MarkraD
MarkraD
1 year ago
Reply to  ohno
JOLTS has us with 10.3 mil jobs to spare, Fed has a dual mandate, jobs and inflation.
We have a labor shortage atop inflation, the Fed would be stupid to not hike.
.
PapaDave
PapaDave
1 year ago
Reply to  ohno

So why do you pay them so much attention? Are you going to waste your life railing at all these perceived injustices, or are you going to use your time building a better life for yourself?

When did Americans become such crybabies?
KidHorn
KidHorn
1 year ago
I suspect there will be a lot of things on sale in January and February. Including autos.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
1 year ago
Reply to  KidHorn
Perhaps equities and bonds too!
8dots
8dots
1 year ago
Xmas orders filled.
shamrock
shamrock
1 year ago
Looks like great news on the inflation front, stagflation averted.
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
1 year ago
With the second estimate of Q3 GDP (out yesterday) BEA includes initial estimate for corporate profits. Put me down for (large scale) layoffs commencing after the First of the Year:
“Profits from current production (corporate profits with inventory valuation and capital consumption
adjustments) decreased $31.6 billion in the third quarter, in contrast to an increase of $131.6 billion in
the second quarter (table 10).
Profits of domestic financial corporations decreased $32.9 billion in the third quarter, compared with a
decrease of $46.0 billion in the second quarter. Profits of domestic nonfinancial corporations increased
$6.1 billion, compared with an increase of $152.2 billion. Rest-of-the-world profits decreased $4.7
billion, in contrast to an increase of $25.5 billion. In the third quarter, receipts increased $3.1 billion, and
payments increased $7.8 billion.”
Siliconguy
Siliconguy
1 year ago
Reply to  Tony Bennett

My daughter got her lay off notice last week, effective Dec 31. The water testing lab will be shipping most of the samples they used to do to other labs. All that will remain at the local lab are those with too short of hold times to ship out.

There will be a half dozen STEM graduates available Jan 2 just from there.
Tony Bennett
Tony Bennett
1 year ago
Chicago PMI (November) out yesterday.
Prior … 45.2
consensus … 47.1
range of “experts” … 45.0 to 48.0
actual … 37.2
Cox Automotive has new car inventory (end of October) at 49 days*. Up from 43 days end of September.
*based on monthly sales pace.
Salmo Trutta
Salmo Trutta
1 year ago
With the personal savings rate so low, it would seem a likely inflection point (i.e., a Xmas blowoff):
Personal Saving Rate (PSAVERT) | FRED | St. Louis Fed (stlouisfed.org)

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