Friday, November 1, 2024

ISM manufacturing poor again in October

 

 - by New Deal democrat


As usual, next week there will be a dearth of economic data, so I’ll report on construction spending then.


In the meantime, we got another poor ISM manufacturing report, with the total index declining to 46.5, the lowest reading this year, while the more leading new orders component increased 1.0 to 47.1. As a refresher, any reading below 50 means contraction.

Because manufacturing is of diminishing importance to the economy, and was in deep contraction both in 2015-16 and again in 2022 without any recession occurring, I now use an economically weighted three month average of the manufacturing and non-manufacturing indexes, with a 25% and 75% weighting, respectively, for forecasting purposes.

Including October, here are the last six months of both the headline (left column) and new orders (right) numbers:

MAY 48.9. 45.4
JUN 48.5. 49.3
JUL. 46.8. 47.4
AUG 47.2. 44.6
SEP 47.2. 46.1
OCT 46.5. 47.1

Here is what they look like graphically:



The three month average for the manufacturing index is 47.0, and for the new orders component 45.9. For the past two months, the average for the non-manufacturing headline has been 53.2 and the new orders component has been 56.2. That means the threshold for the October non-manufacturing numbers is roughly 49 and 41 (!)  respectively for the economically weighted average not to forecast recession. That seems pretty unlikely.