Texas factory activity continued to expand in July following a
record contraction in the spring, according to business executives
responding to the Texas Manufacturing Outlook Survey. The production
index, a key measure of state manufacturing conditions, inched up from
13.6 to 16.1, suggesting a slight pickup in the pace of output growth.
Other measures of manufacturing activity also pointed to slightly
accelerating growth this month. The new orders index advanced four
points to 6.9. The growth rate of orders index turned positive in July,
coming in at 1.3, after spending four months in negative territory.
The capacity utilization and shipments indexes pushed up to 14.0 and
17.3, respectively, their highest readings in nearly a year.
Perceptions of broader business conditions were mixed in July. The
general business activity index remained slightly negative, edging up
from -6.1 to -3.0. The company outlook index registered a second
consecutive positive reading, increasing three points to 5.9. The index
measuring uncertainty regarding companies’ outlooks shot up from 9.1
to 20.9, with more than a third of manufacturing executives indicating
increased uncertainty from June.
Labor market measures indicated modest growth in employment and
workweek length. The employment index pushed up from -1.5 to 3.1,
marking its first positive reading since January. Eighteen percent of
firms noted net hiring, while 15 percent noted net layoffs. The hours
worked index also turned positive, rising from -4.3 to 5.8.
Input and labor costs continued to increase, while selling prices
were fairly flat in July. The raw materials prices index posted a third
positive reading in a row but fell slightly from 12.3 to 9.7. The
wages and benefits index was positive for a second consecutive month,
rising from 6.8 to 9.0. The finished goods prices index, however,
remained slightly negative, inching up three points to -1.5.
This
near-zero reading suggests little change in selling prices from June
following four months of more-pronounced price declines.
Expectations regarding future business activity remained universally
positive in July, though some were less positive than last month. The
future production index slipped to 37.2, while the future general
business activity index dropped nine points to 10.6.
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