US PMI Shows Building Strength in Manufacturing
The US ISM PMI came in at 59.6, beating estimates of 57 (ranging from 54 to
59), and February's 56.5 and showing further strengthening of the US
manufacturing sector. A level over 50 indicates expansion. Much of the strength
in the ISM numbers has been explained away by stimulus spending and inventory
cycle, and the impulse from these drivers is probably still present. But there
are some emerging signs that there could be glimmers of underlying strength
starting to take hold too.
The chart below shows the main PMI index with the key leading indicator of new
orders (still pretty strong by recent historical standards), and the employment
index (which is still showing jobs net higher, albeit 1 point off). The chart
points to a pretty sharp recovery, but obviously challenges still remain ahead.

One of the main boosters to the index was the prices index (see the below
chart). Historically there has been a pretty strong relation between the prices
index and headline CPI, the chart below demonstrates this and could herald
further increases in inflation. However there is the base period effect and
probably still some price normalisation impact (i.e. prices were dropped to
increase sales, and now they're being brought back up). As an aside another key
driver of the PMI increase was inventories (jumping up 8 points), showing that
inventory rebuilding has been a key source of activity in the sector.

The final chart in this article shows the international trade component indices
of the PMI. The reason I include this is that while it's likely that the US will
end up having a cyclical recovery, in order to have a more structural and
sustainable recovery there needs to be a sustained improvement in the export
sector (as well as more saving and less spending). The chart shows both export
and import indexes improving, but there is some promise from a slightly stronger
export orders index.
So
overall it was a pretty strong result in the PMI, and probing into the
sub-indices shows that there may be some underlying strength. Backlogs are on
the rise, new orders are still high in spite of inventories growing much
stronger, production is strong, and international trade indexes are recovering
sharply too. However there's also a few caution signs, for example the prices
index was one of the main drivers of the strong PMI, and could herald some
inflationary pressure. Also there's the big caution that it's still early days,
and it will still be a few months yet before we can tell whether the recovery is
still artificial or that it has some fundamental strength.
Sources:
Econ Grapher Analytics www.econgrapher.com
Institute for Supply Management www.ism.ws
Bureau of Labor Statistics www.bls.gov
Article Source: http://www.econgrapher.com/2apr-uspmi.html
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