ISM factory gauge ticked up to 49 in June from 48.5
Indexes of orders and employment fell to three-month lows
US factory activity contracted in June for a fourth consecutive month as orders and employment shrank at a faster pace, extending the malaise in manufacturing.
The Institute for Supply Management’s manufacturing index edged up 0.5 point last month to 49, according to data released Tuesday. Readings below 50 indicate contraction. A measure of prices paid for raw materials showed slightly faster inflation.
Bookings contracted by the most in three months and have been shrinking for the past five months, likely a reflection of higher tariffs and a general slowdown in the economy. An index of order backlogs fell 2.8 points, the most in a year, to 44.3. Backlogs have contracted a record 33 straight months.
Government figures last week showed consumer spending declined in May by the most since the beginning of the year. The drop followed the weakest quarter for personal consumption since the onset of the pandemic.
Tepid demand and shrinking order backlogs help explain a faster rate of decline in factory employment. The ISM gauge dropped to a three-month low. It's also contracted five straight months.
Meanwhile, higher materials costs remain an issue for producers, the ISM survey indicated. The group’s price measure ticked up to 69.7, near the highest level since June 2022.
The import and export measures also contracted but at a slower pace. The import gauge jumped 7.5 points, the most in five years, after tumbling a month earlier.
Factory production shifted into expansion territory in June after shrinking for three months.
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