Economic activity in the manufacturing sector
grew in July, new data shows, with the overall economy achieving a twenty-sixth
consecutive month of growth.
US supply executives offered their thoughts on raw
material prices in the latest ‘Manufacturing ISM Institute for
Supply Management (ISM) Report On
Business.
Those in the textile industry reported a continued increase in the
price of raw materials.
The ISM Prices Index registered 60% in July, 18.5 percentage points
lower compared to the June reading of 78.5%, indicating raw material prices
increased for the twenty-sixth consecutive month, albeit at a much slower rate.
The Prices Index has been at or above 60% for 23 straight months. The
month-over-month decline of 18.5 percentage points is the fourth biggest
decline on record (since 1948) and the steepest since a 22.1-percentage point
drop in June 2010.
“The slowing in price increases is being driven by volatility
in the energy markets, softening in the copper, steel, aluminium and corrugate
markets and a significant decrease in chemical demand,” explained Timothy
Fiore, chair of the Institute for Supply Management Manufacturing Business
Survey Committee.
Notably, 21.5% of respondents reported paying lower prices in July, compared
to 8.3% in June,” continued Fiore. A Prices Index above 52.6%, over time, is
generally consistent with an increase in the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
Producer Price Index for Intermediate Materials.
In July, 12 of 18 industries reported paying increased prices for raw
materials, with textile mills among them.
Despite this, 11 manufacturing industries reported growth
in July, with apparel, leather and allied products seeing the most growth of
those industries. Textile mills also reported growth.
Overall, the July Manufacturing PMI registered 52.8%, down 0.2
percentage point from the reading of 53% in June. This figure indicates
expansion in the overall economy for the twenty-sixth month in a row after a
contraction in April and May 2020. This is the lowest Manufacturing
PMI figure since June 2020, when it registered 52.4%.
Meanwhile, the New Export Orders Index reading of 52.6% is up
1.9 percentage points compared to June’s figure of 50.7%.
By Just Style