By Lucia Mutikani
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -A measure of U.S. manufacturing activity fell to a 14-month low in January amid an outbreak of COVID-19 infections, supporting the view that economic growth lost steam at the start of the year.
But the survey from the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) on Tuesday marked the third straight month of signs of improvements in labor and supplier delivery performance. Still, Timothy Fiore, chair of the ISM manufacturing business survey committee, noted “shortages of critical intermediate materials, difficulties in transporting products and lack of direct labor on factory floors due to the COVID-19 Omicron variant.”
The ISM’s index of national factory activity dropped to a reading of 57.6 last month, the lowest since November 2020, from 58.8 in December. A reading above 50 indicates expansion in manufacturing, which accounts for 11.9% of the U.S. economy.
Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the index would drop to 57.5. All of the six biggest manufacturing industries – machinery, food, transportation equipment, computer and electronic products, chemical products, and petroleum and coal products reported moderate to strong growth.
The economy hit a soft patch in December which appeared to have persisted in early 2022 as coronavirus infections, driven by the Omicron variant, surged across the country. The ensuing disruptions at businesses and schools have led economists to anticipate a sharp slowdown in job growth in January.
Makers of chemical products reported “massive interruptions to our production due to supplier COVID-19 problems limiting their manufacturing of key raw materials like steel cans and chemicals.” Similar sentiments were echoed by their counterparts in the fabricated metal products industry.
Transportation equipment manufacturers complained that “transportation, labor and inflation issues continue to hamper our supply chain and ability to service our customers.” Machinery manufacturers said they were constrained by “transportation restrictions and a lack of supplier manpower.”
But makers of nonmetallic mineral products are seeing light at the end of the tunnel, reporting that “the supply chain crunch may be loosening a bit.”
Stocks on Wall Street were trading lower. The dollar dipped versus a basket of currencies. Prices of longer-dated U.S. Treasuries fell.
PRICES MARCH HIGHER
The economy grew at a 6.9% annualized rate in the fourth quarter, helping to boost overall growth in 2021 to 5.7%, the strongest performance since 1984. Economists at Goldman Sachs on Monday slashed their first-quarter gross domestic product growth estimate to a 0.5% rate from a 2.0% pace, citing Omicron and reduced government payments to households.
The ISM survey’s forward-looking new orders sub-index fell to 57.9 last month, the lowest reading since June 2020, from 61.0 in December. It was the second straight monthly slowdown in new orders. But customer inventories remain depressed, which could help to limit the pace of moderation in orders growth.
There was another tentative sign of improving supply chains, though they still remain very tight.
The survey’s measure of supplier deliveries was little changed at 64.6. A reading above 50% indicates slower deliveries to factories. The steady reading in the index is encouraging given the Omicron wave, which economists had feared would keep more factory workers at home and further stress supply chains.
Still, prices at the factory gate continued to march higher. The survey’s measure of prices paid by manufacturers increased to a reading of 76.1 from 68.2 in December, suggesting that inflation could remain uncomfortably high for a while.
The Federal Reserve last week said https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/inflation-fighting-fed-likely-flag-march-interest-rate-hike-2022-01-26 it was likely to raise interest rates in March, with economists expecting as much as seven hikes this year to tame inflation.
Despite Omicron’s spread, factories hired more workers last month, with the ISM survey’s measure of manufacturing employment increasing to a 10-month high. This is welcome news amid an anticipated sharp slowdown in job growth or even a decline in nonfarm payrolls in January.
According to a preliminary Reuters survey of economists, nonfarm payrolls likely increased by 150,000 jobs in January after rising by 199,000 in December. Estimates range from a decline of 400,000 jobs to an increase of 385,000. The Labor Department is scheduled to publish January’s employment report on Friday.
But worker shortages remain an obstacle. A separate report from the Labor Department on Tuesday showed job openings increased 150,000 to 10.9 million on the last day of December, close to the all-time high of 11.098 million reached in July.
The nearly broad rise was led by accommodation and food services, which reported an additional 133,000 job openings. There were also notable increases in vacancies in information, nondurable goods manufacturing as well as state and local government education. Layoffs hit a record low.
“It seems clear from these data that the labor market got even tighter at the end of December than was apparent in the December payroll data,” said Conrad DeQuadros, senior economic advisor at Brean Capital in New York. “These data suggest that any signs of weakness in job growth in January would not represent a weakening in labor demand.”
(Reporting by Lucia MutikaniEditing by Chizu Nomiyama and Paul Simao)