The Institute for Supply Management released their monthly Manufacturing ISM Report on Business today. The Purchasing Manager's Index (PMI) came in at 36.2% for November which is down from 38.9% for October. This is a dramatic drop from a few months ago where PMI for August 2008 was at 49.9%. Economist's had expected PMI to drop to 37%. PMI is now at the lowest level since May 1982. A PMI reading of 36.2% suggests that the manufacturing economy and the overall economy are both contracting. Per ISM:
"A reading above 50 percent indicates that the manufacturing economy is generally expanding; below 50 percent indicates that it is generally contracting...if the PMI for November (36.2 percent) is annualized, it corresponds to a 1.5 percent decrease in real GDP annually....A PMI in excess of 41.1 percent, over a period of time, generally indicates an expansion of the overall economy."
Here is what some of the respondents to the ISM survey are saying:
Manufacturing has fallen off a cliff after holding up well in this financial downturn. Just today, the NBER declared that we are in a recession that began in December 2007. This recession is already lasting longer than the average recession. It has turned nasty in the last few months and looks like it has a ways to go. In the previous recessions, PMI has rebounded quickly right after the recession has ended.
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2 comments:
Your charts are informative and attractive. What software do you use? jack.miller@gmail.com
Thanks. I use Microsoft Excel to create the graphs. I save them as PDFs and either use Microsoft OneNote to convert them to PNG files or Adobe Acrobat to convert them to JPGs.
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