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New Orders and Production Continue Decline Despite Slower Rate

In September, the U.S. manufacturing sector contracted for the sixth consecutive month, with the Manufacturing PMI matching the figure in August at 47.2%. New orders (46.1%), production (49.8%) and backlog of orders (44.1%) remained in contraction, but at a slower rate of decline. Inventories dropped significantly from a rate of growth (50.3%) to contraction (43.9%), and supplier deliveries are still slowing. Demand continued to be weak, with companies hesitant to invest due to federal monetary policy and election uncertainty.

The New Orders Index continued its contraction for the sixth consecutive month but is up 1.5 percentage points from August. This decline reflects ongoing uncertainty and concern about a lack of new order activity, with only two major sectors, computer and electronic products and food, beverage and tobacco products, reporting an increase in new orders. Their confidence in the future economic environment remains at its lowest levels since the COVID-19 pandemic recovery.

The Production Index remained in contraction in September but is up 5.0 percentage points from August. Of the six largest manufacturing sectors, three (computer and electronic products; food, beverage and tobacco products; and fabricated metal products) reported increased production.

The Employment Index fell 2.1 percentage points from August, among the lowest readings since July 2020. Companies continued to reduce headcounts through layoffs, attrition and hiring freezes, with only the food, beverage and tobacco products and machinery sectors expanding employment in September.

The Prices Index dropped 5.7 percentage points to 48.3%, indicating raw materials prices decreased in September after eight straight months of increases. Key commodity prices were less volatile, with petroleum-derived products showing weakness, aluminum indicating slowing growth, corrugate and ocean freight continuing growth and steel and steel products prices easing. Approximately 13% of companies reported paying higher prices, compared to 21% in August.

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