At 51.9, the final Markit U.S. Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index™ (PMI™) signalled only a modest manufacturing expansion in June. Having fallen from 52.3 in May, and dropping below the earlier flash estimate of 52.2, the PMI indicated the slowest rate of growth since last October.The ISM PMI for June will be released at 10 AM today.
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Firms generally linked the increase in output to larger volumes of new work, though new order growth was little-changed from May’s modest pace. Much of the increase in new work originated domestically, with new export orders falling for the second month running and dropping at the sharpest rate since August 2009.
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Employment in the manufacturing sector was broadly unchanged in June. This ended a 40-month sequence of increases. A number of firms commented that higher new order requirements were balanced with attempts to control costs.
“Manufacturing clearly down-shifted a gear between the first and second quarters, and is at risk of losing further momentum as we head into the second half of the year." [said Chris Williamson, Chief Economist at Markit]
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Domestic demand is far from lively, but it is a deteriorating export scene that is causing the real problems. Export orders are being lost at the fastest rate since the height of the financial crisis in mid-2009."
Monday, July 1, 2013
Markit PMI shows "modest manufacturing expansion" in June, New export orders decline sharply
From MarkIt: Markit U.S. Manufacturing PMI™ – final data
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