Nearly flat are the results of both September's manufacturing PMI, at
51.0, and services PMI, 50.9. The composite for the month is 51.0 and
little changed from August's 51.2 in a two-month stretch that is the
weakest for these data in more than three years.
And the outlook
for October's activity isn't favorable based on new business growth
which, despite an uptick for the manufacturing sample that was, however,
offset by services, is at record lows for this report where data go
back about 10 years.
Companies can keep up activity like
production, at least for a time, by working down backlog orders which
they are doing in these samples. Low backlogs are a negative for
employment which the report notes saw cutbacks. In fact, indications
from the samples, for the first time in nearly 10 years, point to
contraction in September private payrolls. A small plus is a slight pick
up in business expectations which, nevertheless, remain near seven year
lows. Confirmation of weakness comes from prices which contracted for
inputs, especially in the service sector, and were unchanged for selling
prices.
The report notes that export orders for the
manufacturing sample continue to weaken, a reminder that slowing global
demand has been holding down the US factory sector and appears to be
spilling into services and holding this sector down as well.
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