US Final Manufacturing PMI
It's a leading indicator of economic health - businesses react quickly to market conditions, and their purchasing managers hold perhaps the most current and relevant insight into the company's view of the economy;
Above 50.0 indicates industry expansion, below indicates contraction. The 'Previous' listed is the 'Actual' from the Flash release and therefore the 'History' data will appear unconnected. There are 2 versions of this report released about a week apart – Flash and Final. The Flash release is the earliest and thus tends to have the most impact. Source first released in May 2012;
- US Final Manufacturing PMI Graph
- History
Expected Impact / Date | Actual | Forecast | Previous |
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Jul 1, 2024 | 51.6 | 51.7 | 51.7 |
Jun 3, 2024 | 51.3 | 50.9 | 50.9 |
May 1, 2024 | 50.0 | 49.9 | 49.9 |
Apr 1, 2024 | 51.9 | 52.5 | 52.5 |
Mar 1, 2024 | 52.2 | 51.5 | 51.5 |
Feb 1, 2024 | 50.7 | 50.3 | 50.3 |
Jan 2, 2024 | 47.9 | 48.4 | 48.2 |
Dec 1, 2023 | 49.4 | 49.4 | 49.4 |
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- US Final Manufacturing PMI News
- From pmi.spglobal.com|21 hr ago
The US manufacturing sector remained in growth territory at the end of the second quarter of the year. Although client demand remained muted and business confidence hit a 19-month low, new orders rose for a second month running. In turn, production continued to rise, albeit at a weaker rate. The most positive aspect of the latest survey was the fastest increase in employment since September 2022. Although input costs continued to rise sharply, the rate of inflation eased in June, while selling prices increased at the slowest pace in ...
- From pmi.spglobal.com|Jun 3, 2024
New orders returned to growth in the US manufacturing sector in May, supporting a faster expansion in production midway through the second quarter of the year. Meanwhile, business confidence picked up and positive expectations regarding the future for the sector contributed to the hiring of additional staff, a renewed rise in purchasing activity and a build-up of stocks of finished goods. Meanwhile, the rate of input cost inflation quickened to the fastest in just over a year, with firms raising their selling prices in response. The ...
- From youtube.com/schwabnetwork|May 2, 2024
Semiconductor selling, an unsure FOMC, and a downright shocking ISM report make today the biggest of the year, argues OJ. Two changes on his Risk Radar, one more surprising than the other.
- From pmi.spglobal.com|May 1, 2024
The US manufacturing sector suffered a setback in April as new orders decreased for the first time in 2024 so far. Work on outstanding business helped to keep production in growth territory, however, while firms continued to take on extra staff, in part due to positive expectations for the coming months. Manufacturers scaled back their purchasing activity in response to lower new orders, with pre-production inventories also down. Meanwhile, output prices increased at a slower pace but the rate of input cost inflation quickened to ...
- From pmi.spglobal.com|Apr 1, 2024
Signs of improving wider economic conditions and market demand fed through to a further expansion of US manufacturing production in March, with the rate of expansion hitting a 22-month high. The rate of job creation also quickened, but new order growth softened. Meanwhile, firms generally signalled a preference to draw down inventories amid sufficient holdings and efforts to improve cash flow. Purchasing activity and stocks of both inputs and finished goods were all scaled back following increases in February. On the inflation front, ...
- From pmi.spglobal.com|Mar 1, 2024
February data signalled a quicker pace of improvement in the health of the US manufacturing sector, according to the latest PMIŽ survey compiled by S&P Global. The overall rate of growth was the fastest since July 2022, with the upturn supported by a renewed increase in production and a quicker rise in new orders. Domestic and foreign client demand strengthened, driving total sales higher and at the sharpest pace since May 2022. Greater new order inflows sparked a steeper pace of job creation and an uptick in input buying, as stock ...
- From pmi.spglobal.com|Feb 1, 2024|1 comment
The opening month of 2024 saw an improvement in the health of the US manufacturing sector for the first time since April 2023, according to the latest PMIŽ survey data from S&P Global. Although only marginal, overall growth was supported by a return to expansion in new orders and a slower contraction in output. Production was reportedly hampered, however, by a renewed decline in supplier performance and longer input deliveries. Greater transportation costs pushed input prices higher on the month, with cost inflation hitting a ...
- From zerohedge.com|Jan 2, 2024
Weaker than expected construction spending data and a dismal (final) Manufacturing PMI print for December suggested 2024 is not off to the 'goldilocks' start so many hoped for. chart However, despite the 'weak' data, Treasury yields were higher and the dollar stronger. Treasury yields were up across the board with the short-end underperforming (2Y +9bps, 30Y +5bps). Yields gapped higher to open and then traded in a narrow range from the European open... chart The 10Y yield gapped up to three-week-highs, hovering at the post-FOMC ...
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