Another month and another month of wild volatility for the Chicago PMI
which lurched from solid expansion in January to noticeable contraction
in February. At a headline 47.6, Chicago's PMI has fallen outside
Econoday's consensus range for a third month in a row! Still, this
report is closely watched and confirms other early indications of
February softness, not only for manufacturing but for services as well
since this report tracks both sectors. The good news in the report is
that new orders have held over breakeven 50 which hints at better
readings in next month's report. Now the bad news. Production is down
sharply, backlogs are in a 13th month of straight contraction,
employment is down and in a fifth month of contraction, and prices paid
are contracting at the fastest pace since 2009. The resilience in new
orders limits the signal of damage from this report, but production and
other activity look to have slowed in February following respectable
strength in January.
Recent History Of This Indicator:
The Chicago PMI is expected to fall back to 52.6 from January's great
and completely unexpected 12.7-point surge to 55.6. Readings in the
January report swung from yearlong lows back to yearlong highs with new
orders and backlog orders posting substantial improvement along with
production. Holding in the negative column, however, were employment and
input prices. This report, which can be very volatile, tracks the whole
of the Chicago-area economy.
No comments:
Post a Comment