Wednesday, October 3, 2012

For the second consecutive month the Non-Manufacturing ISM surprised to the upside.

In September, the NMI™ registered 55.1 percent, indicating continued growth in the non-manufacturing sector for the 33rd consecutive month. A reading above 50 percent indicates the non-manufacturing sector economy is generally expanding; below 50 percent indicates the non-manufacturing sector is generally contracting.

IndexSeptAugPercentage Point ChangeDirectionRate of ChangeTrend in Months
NMI™/PMI™55.153.71.4GrowingFaster33
Business Activity/Production59.955.64.3GrowingFaster38
New Orders57.753.74GrowingFaster38
Employment51.153.8-2.7GrowingSlower2
Supplier Deliveries51.551.50SlowingSame2
Inventories48.552.5-4ContractingFrom Growing1
Prices68.164.33.8IncreasingFaster3
Backlog of Orders4850.5-2.5ContractingFrom Growing1
New Export Orders50.552-1.5GrowingSlower3
Imports5049.50.5UnchangedFrom Contracting1
Inventory Sentiment6567-2Too HighSlower184


Last month I was asked if the services ISM changed my view of recession. I wanted to see the jobs report first. The household survey had horrendous results for the second month.

Household Survey

  • In September the number of people employed fell by 119,000.
  • In the last two months, the number of people employed fell by 314,000!
  • In the last year, the civilian population rose by 3,695,000. Yet the labor force only rose by 971,000.
  • In September Civilian Labor Force fell by 368,000.
  • In September those “not” in the labor force increased by 581,000 to a record 88.921 million
  • In August, those "not" in the labor force increased by 348,000 to 88,340,000 a record at the time

Thus in the last two months those "not" in the labor force increased by 929,000.  This is not demographics!

Since then data has been generally poor, but mixed. Home prices give further indication of a bottoming process. Yet, Durable Goods Orders Ex-Transportation "Unexpectedly" Drop, Down Third Month, July Revised Lower

Moreover, US CEOs Sharply Reduce Expectations for Economic Outlook, Hiring; Third Largest Plunge in 6-Month Expectations in History.

Curiously, even with this strong services ISM, employment is weakening although still positive.

All in all, it is the ISM numbers that seem out of sync with most of the rest of the data, especially household survey numbers.

Once again, let's see what Friday brings, but this time, one solid month will not convince me in light of other weakening data.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/

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