Continued Expansion for the Manufacturing Sector
At 59.0, the ISM manufacturing survey result provides further evidence of a continued expansion in the U.S. manufacturing sector and thereby supports the case for continued overall economic growth (top graph). Our outlook is for four percent growth in industrial production for the second half of this year.Production came in at 64.5, with gains in 15 out of 17 industries. This was the sixth consecutive month of expansion in the production index which reinforces the view of sustained growth in the manufacturing sector. Industries reporting improvement included fabricated metals, machinery, paper, plastics, chemicals and computer/electronics. Electrical equipment production was softer.
In another signal of continued growth, the employment index came in at 58.1, with 14 of 18 industries reporting improvement. These industries include fabricated metals, machinery, plastics, chemicals, computers & electronics and transportation equipment. We expect another positive print for manufacturing employment when nonfarm payrolls are released Friday.
New Orders: Strongest Since January 2004
New orders (middle graph) rose to 66.7 from 63.4 and this represents the fourth consecutive monthly improvement in orders. Gains were in 14 of 16 industries, with expansion in machinery, plastics, chemicals, transportation equipment, paper and fabricated metals. The new orders index indicates forward momentum in the economy. This indication is reinforced by the increase in the new export orders index and the backlogs index as well. Given the lack of conviction in business spending earlier this year, this is a welcome development. This report signals a bigger contribution from equipment outlays than the more modest growth environment we have been expecting.Prices Paid: Continued Signal of Rising Input Pressures
Amid renewed attention to inflation, the prices-paid measure from the ISM takes on a greater level of significance. We learned today that the prices paid index registered 58.0 and has been at or above this level for the past four months, which is consistent with rising prices (bottom graph). Moreover, the prices-paid measure has been above its 12-month moving average for the past seven months.This pricedynamic presents a challenge to corporate profits. Of the 18 manufacturing industries followed in the ISM report, 9 of them reported paying increased prices. These prices-paid indicators corroborate other signs of rising inflation pressures in the U.S. economy and strike us as more than noise. The Fed will likely revise its economic and inflation higher forecasts later this month for 2014 and 2015.
Recommended Content
Editors’ Picks
EUR/USD stays below 1.0800 after upbeat US data
EUR/USD stays under bearish pressure and trades slightly below 1.0800 in the American session on Thursday. The data from the US showed that the real GDP growth for the fourth quarter got revised higher to 3.4% from 3.2%, supporting the USD and weighing on the pair.
GBP/USD stays in daily range above 1.2600
GBP/USD fluctuates in a narrow channel above 1.2600 on Thursday. The better-than-expected Initial Jobless Claims data from the US and the upward revision to the Q4 GDP growth helps the USD stay resilient against its rivals and limits the pair's upside.
Gold clings to strong daily gains above $2,200
Gold retreats from daily highs but holds comfortably above $2,200 in the American session on Friday. The benchmark 10-year US Treasury bond yield stays above 4.2% after upbeat US data and makes it difficult for XAU/USD to preserve its bullish momentum.
XRP price falls to $0.60 support as Ripple ruling doesn’t help Coinbase lawsuit against SEC
XRP programmatic sales ruling by Judge Torres was completely rejected by another US Court that ruled in favor of the SEC in a lawsuit against Coinbase.
Portfolio rebalancing and reflation trades emerge into Q2
Yesterday’s price action pointed at a possible end-of-quarter portfolio rebalancing as the session saw the laggards of the quarter like Apple and Tesla gain, and the stars like Microsoft and Nvidia retreat.