U.S. factory sector in deepest slump in more than 10
years
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[January 04, 2020] By
Jason Lange and Dan Burns
(Reuters) - The U.S. manufacturing sector
fell into its deepest slump in more than a decade in December as the
U.S.-China trade war kept a lid on factory output, orders and
employment, although the long-awaited Phase 1 deal between Washington
and Beijing could limit further downside.
The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) said its index of national
factory activity fell to 47.2 last month from 48.1 in November. It was
the lowest reading since June 2009 and, coupled with readings for both
new orders and factory employment at multi-year lows, thwarted
expectations for a leveling off in the pace of decline in a sector
buffeted by trade tensions.
A reading below 50 indicates the sector is in contraction, and
December's reading marked the fifth straight month below that benchmark
level. Economists polled by Reuters had been looking for an increase to
49.0.
The manufacturing sector had been under pressure for much of the second
half of 2019, as tit-for-tat tariffs by the United States and China
slowed the flow of goods between the world's two largest economies and
contributed to a cooling in the pace of global economic growth.
Last month, the two sides announced they had reached agreement on a
Phase 1 deal, and U.S. President Donald Trump this week said the accord
would be signed on Jan. 15 in Washington, and talks to cement a wider
Phase 2 deal would begin shortly.
"Global trade remains the most significant cross-industry issue, but
there are signs that several industry sectors will improve as a result
of the Phase 1 trade agreement," Timothy Fiore, chair of ISM's
Manufacturing Business Survey Committee, said in a statement.
In addition to the drag from trade frictions, Boeing Co's <BA.N>
inability to get its 737 Max jetliner back in service may have been a
factor, especially in the transportation equipment industry, which was
the weakest of the six big industry sectors, according to Fiore. Boeing
will cease production of the plane this month until regulators allow it
to resume flying in the wake of two crashes, and that could be a
headwind in the coming months that may counter improvements arising
elsewhere from the trade deal.
While ISM's overall measure of activity in December was the lowest in
more than a decade, Fiore said on balance the contraction remains
relatively shallow.
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A production line employee works at the AMES Companies shovel
manufacturing factory in Camp Hill, Pennsylvania, U.S. on June 29,
2017. REUTERS/Tim Aeppel/File Photo
"It's not super low," he said on a conference call. "We're still in that range
of slight contraction to slight expansion."
Typically the index would have to drop below 43 to signal the risk of a wider
economic recession. Weakness in the manufacturing sector was one of the concerns
that spurred the U.S. Federal Reserve to cut interest rates three times last
year, although the central bank appears to be done with lowering borrowing costs
for now, with officials like Fed Chair Jerome Powell satisfied the economy is in
"a good place."
CONSTRUCTION SPENDING RISES
Overall, the U.S. economy did appear to be in relatively sound condition near
the end of 2019, supported by low unemployment and healthy consumer spending,
which accounts for roughly 70% of economic activity.
The housing sector also appears to be contributing to the growth picture after a
prolonged run as a drag. In a separate report, the Commerce Department said U.S.
construction spending rose more than expected in November and builders also
spent more in earlier months than previously estimated.
Construction spending increased 0.6% in November, beating analysts' consensus
forecast of a 0.3% gain. Data for October and September was revised to show
increases in spending, a reversal from previous estimates of contractions in
spending during those months.
The gain in November was driven by a 1.9% increase in private home-building, an
indication the Fed's rate cuts last year, which drove mortgage rates lower, were
boosting the economy.
Meanwhile, several of the largest U.S. automakers on Friday reported another
year of stable sales of pickup trucks, fueled by holiday season discounts and
lower interest rates on vehicle loans, even as demand for passenger cars fell
further.
Analysts expect overall 2019 vehicle sales to fall by about 1% from 2018, but
still finish above 17 million vehicles for the fifth consecutive year.
(Reporting by Dan Burns and Jason Lange; Editing by Paul Simao)
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