Stock Quote        
  Join        Login  
logo

Is The June Slowdown In Manufacturing Activity A Sign Of Things To Come?

 July 02, 2012 01:06 PM

(By capital Spectator) Manufacturing activity contracted in June, according to the Institute for Supply Management's manufacturing index. For the first time since July 2009, the ISM Index slipped under 50, dropping to 49.7 last month. A reading below 50 indicates a contracting manufacturing sector.

Is this an early warning of a new recession? Perhaps, but we're still a long way from declaring the current growth phase of the business cycle dead. Like any one economic indicator, the ISM Index is far from flawless when it comes to using it as a benchmark for anticipating major turning points in the economy. To be precise, a below-50 reading for this indicator doesn't always correspond with recession. The history of this index is littered with periods when below-50 levels didn't equate with a new downturn in the broad economy.

Then again, it's also clear that every recession in the post-World War II era has been accompanied by sub-50 readings in the ISM index. Sometimes a dip is relevant, sometimes not. It's too soon to say if today's today is an early warning or another false signal. Nonetheless, it's hard to overlook the latest reading for new orders, which tumbled sharply last month relative to May. On the other hand, manufacturing employment is holding steady.

What we know for sure is that the key economic indicators for May—the most recent full set of monthly numbers published so far—are trending positive. Fourteen crucial leading and coincident indicators through May tell us that recession risk was quite low (for an overview of these indicators, see this post).

Will June tell us differently? Today's ISM report certainly implies that incoming data will be weaker relative to May. But forecasting and reading the numbers in hand are two different tasks. For the moment, growth rolls on, based on a broad set of numbers. We may suffer an attitude adjustment in the weeks ahead, but for now a darker future is still the stuff of speculation.

"Clearly [today's ISM report] is the biggest sign yet that the U.S. is catching the slowdown that is well underway in Europe and China," writes Paul Dales, senior U.S. economist at Capital Economics, in a note to clients, according to MarketWatch. "But it is worth remembering that a reading of below 47.0 is required to be consistent with another recession. This means the index is still consistent with a growing economy, albeit at an annualized rate of a little below 1%."

If June proves to be a turning point for bigger problems, we may find stronger evidence in the government's employment report scheduled for release this Friday (June 6). At the moment, the consensus forecast still calls modest improvement for June vs. May. Private-sector jobs are expected to rise by a net 105,000, up from May's sluggish 82,000 gain, according to Briefing.com.

One reason to think optimistically is today's encouraging news on employment growth last month in small businesses via the Intuit Small Business Employment Index. According to a press release,

The employment index shows that employment increased by 0.3 percent in June, for an annualized rate of 4.1 percent -- the strongest rate of growth that small businesses have seen in the past three months. This equates to approximately 70,000 new jobs created, although Intuit is recalibrating the index and expects these numbers to change.
Let's see if the broad national report on employment confirms the trend... or not.

Rich
i On The Market - Daily Newsletter
Every trading day, be ready to attack the market instead of reacting to the market.

You will know where the key technical resistance and support levels are and what the market is likely to do next. iStock will arm you with a target list of stocks to buy and sell - right now - based on our exclusive, proprietary trading models.

Two Week FREE Trial


Signup for i on the market daily edition


Advertisement

Post Comment -- Login is required to post message
Name:  
Alert for new comments:
Your email:
Your Website:
Title:
Comments:
 

Advertisement
Connect with iStockAnalyst
Popular Articles
Recent Research and Quote
Advertisement
Partner Center



Fundamental data is provided by Zacks Investment Research, and Commentary, news and Press Releases provided by YellowBrix and Quotemedia.
All information provided "as is" for informational purposes only, not intended for trading purposes or advice. iStockAnalyst.com is not an investment adviser and does not provide, endorse or review any information or data contained herein.
The blog articles are opinions by respective blogger. By using this site you are agreeing to terms and conditions posted on respective bloggers' website.
The postings/comments on the site may or may not be from reliable sources. Neither iStockAnalyst nor any of its independent providers is liable for any informational errors, incompleteness, or delays, or for any actions taken in reliance on information contained herein. You are solely responsible for the investment decisions made by you and the consequences resulting therefrom. By accessing the iStockAnalyst.com site, you agree not to redistribute the information found therein.
The sector scan is based on 15-30 minutes delayed data. The Pattern scan is based on EOD data.