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US manufacturing hits 26-year low | US manufacturing hits 26-year low |
(about 6 hours later) | |
US manufacturing activity fell in October to its lowest level for 26 years, according to a new report from the Institute for Supply Management. | US manufacturing activity fell in October to its lowest level for 26 years, according to a new report from the Institute for Supply Management. |
The report cited "significant demand destruction", for the third consecutive month in which the sector contracted. | The report cited "significant demand destruction", for the third consecutive month in which the sector contracted. |
The figures were far worse than the market had expected and pushed the Dow Jones index briefly into negative territory in early morning trading. | The figures were far worse than the market had expected and pushed the Dow Jones index briefly into negative territory in early morning trading. |
However, US construction spending in September fell far less than expected. | However, US construction spending in September fell far less than expected. |
The institute's index of national factory activity fell to 38.9 from 43.5 in September. Any score of less than 50 represents a contraction in manufacturing. | The institute's index of national factory activity fell to 38.9 from 43.5 in September. Any score of less than 50 represents a contraction in manufacturing. |
Manufacturing recession | Manufacturing recession |
October's score is the lowest-recorded since September 1982. | October's score is the lowest-recorded since September 1982. |
Every sector surveyed, apart from clothing and electronic products, reported a contraction for the month. | Every sector surveyed, apart from clothing and electronic products, reported a contraction for the month. |
New orders, production, employment and supplier deliveries all fell, with only inventories of unsold goods increasing on September's score. | New orders, production, employment and supplier deliveries all fell, with only inventories of unsold goods increasing on September's score. |
Export orders fell for the first time following 70 consecutive months of growth. | Export orders fell for the first time following 70 consecutive months of growth. |
Robert Macintosh, chief economist at Eaton Vance, described the figures as "pretty grim". | Robert Macintosh, chief economist at Eaton Vance, described the figures as "pretty grim". |
"It means we're in a recession, it's as simple as that - a pretty solid manufacturing recession," he said. | "It means we're in a recession, it's as simple as that - a pretty solid manufacturing recession," he said. |
There was some good news for consumers, however, as prices fell by 16.5 points to 37, the lowest level since December 2001. | There was some good news for consumers, however, as prices fell by 16.5 points to 37, the lowest level since December 2001. |
If the prices of raw materials are falling, then these savings can be passed on to consumers. | If the prices of raw materials are falling, then these savings can be passed on to consumers. |
Car sales | |
There was more bad news for US manufacturing with the release of October car sales figures. | |
General Motors sales were down 45% compared with October 2007. | |
"This is clearly a severe, severe recession for the US automotive industry and something we really can't sustain," said GM's Mike DiGiovanni. | |
Chrysler's sales fell 35% and Ford's dropped 30%. | |
Overall, 838,156 vehicles were sold in October, down 32% and the worst figures since January 1991, according to Autodata. | |
Meanwhile, US construction spending in September fell 0.3%, according to figures released by the US Commerce Department - less than the 0.8% fall that many analysts had been expecting. | Meanwhile, US construction spending in September fell 0.3%, according to figures released by the US Commerce Department - less than the 0.8% fall that many analysts had been expecting. |
The US figures were released on the same day that Markit Economics published its Purchasing Managers' Index showing eurozone manufacturing activity falling to 41.1 in October. | The US figures were released on the same day that Markit Economics published its Purchasing Managers' Index showing eurozone manufacturing activity falling to 41.1 in October. |
This is the lowest score recorded by the index since it was introduced 11 years ago. | This is the lowest score recorded by the index since it was introduced 11 years ago. |
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