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Employment Index Drops Further with Layoffs and Hiring Freezes

In December, the U.S. manufacturing sector contracted for the ninth consecutive month, with the ISM Manufacturing® PMI rising to 49.3% from 48.4% the prior month, indicating activity contracted at a slower pace. The New Orders Index continued in expansion territory, strengthening to 52.5%. In addition, production returned to expansion after six months of contraction, registering 50.3%. Meanwhile, inventories (48.4%), employment (45.3%) and backlog of orders (45.9%) remained in contraction. The Inventories Index, although still low, ticked up from its November reading of 48.1, suggesting a desire by companies being more willing to advance order deliveries to avoid potential tariffs.

The New Orders Index increased for the second consecutive month and rose 2.1 percentage points from November. While the index hasn’t shown consistent growth since a 24-month streak of expansion ended in May 2022, respondents noted an improvement in demand, with two major sectors—computer and electronic products and food, beverage and tobacco products—reporting an increase in new orders.

The Production Index rose 3.5 percentage points in December to expansion after contracting in November. Despite expanding overall, only one of the six largest manufacturing sectors (computer and electronic products) reported increased production. Meanwhile, an expansion of new orders coupled with relatively stable production levels slowed the rate of declining backlog levels.

The Employment Index dropped 2.8 percentage points in December, contracting for the seventh consecutive month and at a faster pace. Of the six largest manufacturing sectors, none reported increased employment. Furthermore, companies continued to reduce headcounts through layoffs, attrition and hiring freezes.

The Prices Index rose 2.2 percentage points to 52.5%, indicating raw materials prices increased for the third straight month in December. Aluminum, basic chemicals, copper and natural gas registered increases, offset partly by steel, plastic resins and diesel fuel falling in price. Slightly more than 14% of companies reported paying higher prices, up barely from the percentage reported in November but down from nearly 20% in October.

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