This website uses cookies to store information on your computer. Some of these cookies are used for visitor analysis, others are essential to making our site function properly and improve the user experience. By using this site, you consent to the placement of these cookies. Click Accept to consent and dismiss this message or Deny to leave this website. Read our Privacy Statement for more.
Join | Print Page | Contact Us | Sign In
News & Press: Industry

Economic Report: S&P Global: Manufacturing Activity Strengthened in April Despite Challenges

Monday, April 25, 2022   (1 Comments)
Posted by: Alyce Ryan

AICC, through its membership in the Council of Manufacturing Associations, is pleased to present the "Monday Economic Report" from the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF MANUFACTURERS (NAM).

By Chad Moutray, Ph.D., CBE – April 25, 2022

 NAM Weekly Economic Toplines:

  • The  S&P Global Flash U.S. Manufacturing PMI  rose to 59.7 in April, the best reading since September, with key measures strengthening, proving that manufacturing activity remained resilient despite numerous challenges. Still, the index for future output eased to a six-month low, even as it continued to point to optimism about production growth moving forward.
  • Manufacturers continued to cite supply chain bottlenecks and workforce shortages as significant challenges to growth, and inflation remained highly elevated, with output prices soaring to a new all-time high and input costs not far from November’s record high.
  • Meanwhile, the  S&P Global Flash Eurozone Manufacturing PMI  decreased from 56.5 in March to 55.3 in April, the weakest reading since January 2021. The Russian invasion of Ukraine negatively impacted activity, with new orders and output expanding at the slowest pace since June 2020 and exports contracting for the second straight month.
  • The Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank’s  composite index  declined from 27.4 in March to 17.6 in April but continued to signal expanding growth in the manufacturing sector in the district. Hiring grew at the fastest pace in the survey’s history, which dates to May 1968. Raw material costs also picked up solidly in April, expanding at a pace not seen since June 1979.
  • Yet, respondents to the Philly Fed’s survey felt less optimistic in their outlook and orders, with the forward-looking composite index dropping to the lowest reading since December 2008.
  • Nonetheless,  new housing starts  proved to be quite resilient, edging up 0.3% to 1,793,000 units at the annual rate in March, the fastest pace since June 2006, largely on multifamily activity. Single-family starts declined 1.7% from 1,221,000 units to 1,200,000 units.
  • The housing market continues to be challenged by rising building costs, higher mortgage rates, affordability issues and difficulties in finding workers. For their part, builders felt  less optimistic  in their outlook, with inflation, affordability and higher rates pushing the NAHB Housing Market Index to a seven-month low in April.
  • Nonetheless, housing permits increased 0.4% to an annualized 1,873,000 units in March, which was just shy of January’s reading (1,895,000 units), which was the best reading since May 2006, consistent with still-healthy growth in housing construction despite numerous challenges and slower single-family activity.
  • Existing home sales  fell 2.7% to 5.77 million units at the annual rate in March, the slowest pace since June 2020. On a year-over-year basis, existing home sales fell 4.5% from 6.04 million units in March 2021. With that said, the median sales price was $375,300 in March, an all-time high and up 15.0% from $326,300 one year ago.

Comments...

Kris Eggleston says...
Posted Tuesday, April 26, 2022
It still mesmerizes me that the administration shut down the country and then wants to take credit for job replacement under the guise of job growth. My company still hasn't reached full employment and is paying 10 to 15% higher wages than a year ago. Obviously the invasion of Ukraine obviously affected our economy but that just piled on to the administrations bumbling of everything else. Inflation started when the Biden administration shut down oil pipelines and drilling. I would also have to say that cancelling 100% of your supply of critical parts when sales were at an all time low may have been short sighted. Part of the supply chain issue was caused by companies themselves.