ISM Manufacturing PMI Contracts Another Half-Point in May (2024)

Economic Trends

The industrial economy barometer has been in contraction territory for 18 of the past 19 months through May.

ISM Manufacturing PMI Contracts Another Half-Point in May (1)

Author

  • MDM Staff

Date

  • June 3, 2024
  • TypeNews

The Institute for Supply Management released its monthly manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) on June 3 reflecting May activity, which indicated that March’s return to expansion may have been a one-month anomaly followed by a return to contraction.

The PMI — regarded as a reliable indicator of overall U.S. industrial economy health —regressed for a second straight month in May, falling 0.5 percentage points from April to 48.7%.

Economists polled by Reuters had forecasted a May PMI of 49.6%.

The PMI has been in contraction territory (anything below 50.0%) for most of the past two years at 18 of the past 19 months through May.

ISM Manufacturing PMI Contracts Another Half-Point in May (2)

In the PMI’s 10 factoring indices, the May reading was impacted by a major drop in new orders — its largest one-month decline in nearly 2 years. Meanwhile, the index for prices fell back considerably from its highest reading since mid-2022. Backlog of orders had a notable decline, while employment saw a healthy increase.

“Demand remains elusive as companies demonstrate an unwillingness to invest due to current monetary policy and other conditions,” ISM Manufacturing Business Survey Committee Chairman Timothy Fiore commented on the May report. “These investments include supplier order commitments, inventory building and capital expenditures. Production execution continued to expand but was essentially flat compared to the previous month. Suppliers continue to have capacity, with lead times improving and shortages not as severe.”

ISM Manufacturing PMI Contracts Another Half-Point in May (3)

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Fiore added that 55% of manufacturing gross GDP contracted in May, up from 34% in April. Meanwhile, the share of sector GDP registering a composite PMI calculation at or below 45% —a good barometer of overall manufacturing weakness —repeated April’s 4%. Among the top six industries by contribution to manufacturing GDP in May, none had a PMI at or below 45%.

The seven manufacturing industries reporting growth in May were, in order: Printing & Related Support Activities; Petroleum & Coal Products; Paper Products; Textile Mills; Primary Metals; Fabricated Metal Products; and Chemical Products.

The seven industries reporting contraction in May were, in order: Wood Products; Plastics & Rubber Products; Machinery; Computer & Electronic Products; Furniture & Related Products; Transportation Equipment; and Food, Beverage & Tobacco Products.

Survey Commentary

Here is a sampling of PMI survey respondent commentary that ISM provided for May:

  • “Conditions are improving as demand is starting to recover. Costs continue to be a major concern as suppliers that rapidly increased prices in the follow-up from COVID-19 are slow to return to pre-pandemic levels.” [Chemical Products]
  • “Sales continue to exceed expectations in 2024. The forecasted dip in commercial vehicle production volumes appears to be avoided. Operational output is still strong, and the supply chain has the capacity to support. International supply chain risks have been minimized, but the frequency of supplier insolvencies or bankruptcies appears to be increasing.” [Transportation Equipment]
  • “Order flow has stabilized. It took some customers longer to replenish their supply chain network after the fourth-quarter rush we commonly have. Order rates are expected to remain stable through August.” [Food, Beverage & Tobacco Products]
  • “Some small indications of market improvement in China for our instruments and technology. Recovery is still slower than we had hoped, and macroeconomic uncertainty remains in Europe and the Middle East, as well as domestically in the U.S. with ongoing inflationary pressures and anticipation for the (upcoming) election.” [Computer & Electronic Products]
  • “Market conditions have definitely softened. Thankfully, our backlog is strong and will get us through the year. When conditions improve as expected later this year, we will be in a good position to continue building the business. We are a manufacturer of automated packaging equipment for the food and beverage industry, and with a continued shortage of workers, our customers are requiring more and more automation.” [Machinery]
  • “Business is slowing down — it has been a gradual decline for the last several months. We are not seeing new orders at last year’s level, or at this year’s budgeted levels.” [Fabricated Metal Products]
  • “There has been a lot of volatility in sales. On average, our sales look flat, but the volatility is concerning.” [Electrical Equipment, Appliances & Components]
  • “Business remained strong through the first quarter and has started strong for the second quarter. Commercial construction is still going well but on a regional basis, with the Southeast the strongest.” [Nonmetallic Mineral Products]
  • “The major factor affecting our business is the uncertainty of the Federal Reserve’s handling of interest rates, which will affect our customers’ businesses, thereby affecting ours.” [Plastics & Rubber Products]
  • “Business is stable, and orders have been consistent. We’re quoting new business for the factory, and automotive builds continue at averages but not near maximum outputs. Workforce is stable, with the turnover ratio dropping considerably. Salaries and hourly rates increasing to meet inflationary pressures.” [Primary Metals]

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ISM Manufacturing PMI Contracts Another Half-Point in May (2024)

FAQs

ISM Manufacturing PMI Contracts Another Half-Point in May? ›

The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) manufacturing purchasing managers index (PMI) fell to 48.7 in May from 49.2 in April. The latest figures keeps the index in contraction territory for a second straight month. The index has now contracted for 18 of the past 19 months.

What is the PMI in ISM today? ›

US ISM Services PMI is at a current level of 49.40, down from 51.40 last month and down from 51.90 one year ago.

What is the manufacturing PMI for March? ›

India's manufacturing PMI improved to 59.1 in March from 56.9 in February, reflecting stronger growth of new orders and renewed job creation.

How to interpret ISM manufacturing PMI? ›

The ISM Manufacturing Index shows whether manufacturing and the economy as a whole are expanding or contracting. According to the ISM: “A Manufacturing PMI® reading above 50 percent indicates that the manufacturing economy is generally expanding; below 50 percent indicates that it is generally declining.

What does PMI affect ISM manufacturing? ›

The ISM manufacturing index, also known as the purchasing managers' index (PMI), is a monthly indicator of economic activity based on a survey. Flash Manufacturing PMI is an estimate of manufacturing for a country, based on about 85% of total PMI survey responses each month.

What is the PMI reading for ISM services? ›

The Services PMI contains the economic activity of more than 15 industries, measuring employment, prices, and inventory levels. The services report measures business activity for the overall economy. A reading above 50 indicates growth and a reading below 50 indicates a contraction.

What is the purchasing manager index in April 2024? ›

In April 2024, the global PMI amounted to 50.5 for new export orders and 50.3 for manufacturing. The manufacturing PMI was a it's lowest point in August of 2020.

Is ISM PMI a leading indicator? ›

One of the most reliable leading indicators for assessing the state of the U.S. economy is the PMI, formerly known as the Purchasing Managers' Index. PMI is the headline indicator in the ISM Manufacturing "Report on Business," an influential monthly survey of purchasing and supply executives across the United States.

What time is ISM data release? ›

The Services ISM Report On Business® is released on the third business day of the month at 10:00 a.m. (EST). ISM's first industry vertical, the Hospital Report On Business® is released on the fifth business day of each month at 10:00 a.m. (EST).

What is the current PMI? ›

US ISM Manufacturing PMI is at a current level of 48.70, down from 49.20 last month and up from 46.90 one year ago. This is a change of -1.02% from last month and 3.84% from one year ago. The Purchasing Managers Index is a diffusion index summarizing economic activity in the manufacturing sector in the US.

Is high ISM manufacturing PMI good? ›

The ISM Manufacturing Index states figures as a number that indicates whether the manufacturing sector is growing or contracting. A PMI reading over 50 (or over 50%) means the sector is growing compared to the previous month, while a PMI reading under 50 (or under 50%) means the sector has month-over-month contracted.

What is a good manufacturing PMI? ›

A PMI index over 50 represents growth or expansion within the manufacturing sector of the economy compared with the prior month. A reading under 50 represents contraction, and a reading at 50 indicates an equal balance between manufacturers reporting advances and declines in their business.

How does ISM PMI affect gold? ›

What is the link between the PMI Index and the gold prices? In theory, the high PMI (above 50) indicates that the US economy is expanding, which should be bad for the gold prices. And low PMI (below 50) signals the economic contraction, which should support the yellow metal.

What is the PMI index? ›

The Purchasing Managers' Index™ (PMI™) is a survey-based indicator of business conditions, which includes individual measures ('sub-indices') of business output, new orders, employment, costs, selling prices, exports, purchasing activity, supplier performance, backlogs of orders and inventories of both inputs and ...

What are ISM services prices paid? ›

The ISM Prices Paid represents business sentiment regarding future inflation. A high reading is seen as positive for the USD, while a low reading is seen as negative.

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