Philadelphia Manufacturing Activity Declines for Third Straight Month
In December, Philadelphia’s regional manufacturing activity contracted for the third consecutive month and at a faster pace than November. The index for general business activity fell from -1.7 to -10.2. This month, 27.8% of firms reported decreases in activity, while just 17.6% of firms noted increases. The indexes for new orders and shipments returned to positive territory, rising from -8.6 to 5.0 and from -8.7 to 3.2, respectively. Meanwhile, the employment index moved up 6.9 points as the average employee workweek grew 11.0 points to 14.7.
The prices paid index declined from 56.1 to 43.6, its lowest reading since June, while the prices received index rose from 17.7 to 24.3. As has been the case for many months, the prices received index remained lower than the prices paid index, indicating that manufacturers have been absorbing a portion of higher costs paid.
Looking ahead, indicators showing expectations for future growth declined for the first time since June. After climbing 13.4 points in November, expectations for future business activity moved down 8.0 points to 41.6 in December. The drop came from an increase in the proportion of firms expecting a decrease in activity (12.6%). At the same time, the number of firms anticipating an increase in activity (54.2%) was virtually unchanged in December. The future new orders index decreased from 55.6 to 44.0, and the future shipments index edged down from 48.4 to 43.2. On the other hand, the capital expenditures index grew from 26.7 to 30.3, its highest reading since August. The future prices paid and prices received indexes declined from 75.1 to 62.6 and from 56.8 to 55.8, respectively. Additionally, the index for future employment stepped down from 35.7 to 27.1.
In December, firms were asked to estimate production growth in the fourth quarter compared to the third quarter. Of those responses, 52.0% expect higher production, while 16.0% anticipate a decrease. More than a majority of firms (61.5%) reported that uncertainty was at least a slight constraint on capacity utilization this quarter. Other issues cited included labor supply (50.0%) and supply chains (48.0%). Looking forward, 29.2% of firms expect energy markets to be a greater constraint on capacity utilization over the next three months.