Manufacturing falls off cliff edge

Every month the Chartered Institute of Purchasing and Supply releases its report on manufacturing. Every month for several years we have reported on its findings, diligently, but usually putting the story in our third or fourth slot. For 45 months nothing much happened. For 45 months the CIPS Purchasing Managers Index was 50 or slightly higher, suggesting the sector expanded in the month, Now, though, it’s different. All of a sudden the CIPS PMI index is falling like a rock down a cliff.

For July the PMI index stood at just 44.3, down from June’s score of 45.8, and May’s 49.8.

For three months now the PMI index has been below the critical 50 mark.

But that’s just the start of it.

The New Business Index, a pointer to the months ahead, fell too, this time to 40.5. According to CIPS and Markit who jointly produce the report, this was the fastest rate fall in nine-and-a-half years.

Why the fall? Companies cited weaker demand from domestic clients. There were also reports that the downturn in the housing market, the high cost of credit and competition from lower-cost foreign producers impacted on new order volumes. Levels of new business received from abroad also contracted during July.

But, while orders fall, the costs of raw materials rise. This time the input prices index rose to 82.4, yet another series high. To put that in perspective, the index is now almost 20 points up on a year ago, yet even then, it was considered too high.

The output index, that’s the index which tracks what manufacturers charge their customers rose too. In July this index stood at 63.1, also a record. But while manufacturers are upping their prices at a record pace, the rate at which their raw materials are growing in cost is rising even faster, so they are still swallowing a large part of the extra costs.

Rob Dobson, Senior Economist at Markit Economics, said: “A corrosive mix of falling demand and record cost inflation penetrated almost all areas of the UK manufacturing sector in July. Recent months have seen output and new orders fall at their fastest rates for around nine-and-a-half years, leading to sharp cutbacks in employee numbers, as manufacturers struggle to obtain new contracts in the face of deteriorating economic conditions at home and abroad, ongoing housing market turmoil and a weak consumer market. However, with inflation of input costs and output prices climbing further to set new record highs, the MPC will be loathe to risk anchoring inflation expectations at above target levels through a near-term cut in rates.”

The worrying thing though is this. Manufacturing is supposed to be one of those areas that is doing well at the moment. With the lower pound, we are supposed to be exporting our way out of trouble. Clearly the consumer sector is struggling, clearly the High Street is in crisis, clearly construction in the housing sector is virtually grinding to a halt, but manufacturing is supposed to be keeping its end up.

The next few days will see CIPS reports on construction and services. On this occasion they will be more important than normal, as they tell us how widespread the slowdown is. This time last month, both reports showed a sharp slowdown.

Those who keep saying the crisis of 2008 is whooped up by the media, should pause and consider these CIPS reports.

This is not a crisis made, that exists only in the imagination of the media. Which is why comments that the economy is growing too fast and the brakes need to be applied, which some members of the Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee hold to, is dangerous.

That prices are rising at the moment is obvious. But as job losses mount, and the credit crunch means there is less and less money floating around, expect rising prices to turn to falling prices fast.

manufacturing CIPS

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Now manufacturing hits cliff edge

Do you remember those cartoons?  When a character runs over the edge of a cliff, it will look around for a second or so, look worried, and then fall.   Yesterday, a report was released to suggest British manufacturing has run over that cliff.  But the time for sitting in space looking around has ended. In June the manufacturing crash began.

manufacturing cips

The Chartered Institute of Purchasing Supply and Market publish the purchasing managers index every month.    It is an important report, and for that reason we cover it most months.  It is important, but a tad dull.  Not much happens.

This changed in June, but, alas, for the worse.

The CIPS purchasing managers index fell from 49.5 in May to 45.8 In June.  This is the lowest reading for the index since it began in 2001.   A score of below 50 indicates contraction in the industry.  Until April, the index had posted a score of 50 or higher every month for 45 months.

Worryingly, and a little surprisingly, the new export index collapsed too. Falling from 51.1 to 47.4.

As for inflation in the world of manufacturing.  Well, we are afraid to say that if you combine this information with the woe described above, then a perfect storm is created.

The two indices, measuring prices paid by manufacturers and charged by them, hit new all-time highs.  But the prices paid index continues to outstrip prices charged, meaning manufacturers are still swallowing much of their higher costs. 

This could mean that down the line they will be forced to pass a higher proportion of their costs on to customers.    So when oil does finally start to fall, and the prices paid index starts to drop, the prices charged index will probably continue to rise for some time.

Roy Ayliffe, Director of Professional Practice at the Chartered Institute of Purchasing and Supply, talked about the “relentless onslaught of ever weaker domestic demand, slower global economic growth and record cost inflationary pressure,” while Rob Dobson, Senior Economist at Markit Economics, referred to the “brutal combination of survey record cost inflation and weak domestic demand in June.”

In cartoons, whenever a character falls off a cliff, it tends to dust itself off and, bearing a few rapidly disappearing bruises, goes about its business.  So, will it be like that for manufacturing?  Mr Dobson said: “Output and new orders suffered their sharpest drops since late 1998, partly reflecting the ongoing downturn in the housing and credit markets. With conditions in these markets showing no sign of immediate improvement, manufacturing jobs cut at the fastest pace in three years and a series record fall in work-in-hand, times are likely to remain tough entering Q3. On the prices front, output charge inflation broke a new record high in June, which will raise further alarms on the MPC.”

Ummm, so that means No.

 manufacturing inflation

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US manufacturers see light, but in the UK darkness still looms

It is beginning to look as if the baton has been passed on.  In the US there is growing talk Uncle Sam is near the bottom, and beginning the gradual climb upwards – in the UK, the news just gets worse.

The closely watched US Purchasing Managers Index for the Institute of Supply Management rose in May.  At 49.6 the index is still low, but at least it is one point up on the previous month. Anything below 50 suggests manufacturing is contracting.  But ISM says the index usually has to fall to 41.1 before the economy as a whole starts contracting.

us manufacturing

Capital Economics said, “It is too early to sound the all-clear, particularly with housing still in freefall and consumer confidence at rock bottom, but it increasingly looks like the worst case scenario of a severe recession has been averted.”

But in the UK, the Purchasing Managers Index produced by the Chartered Institute of Purchasing and Supply fell to 50, the lowest reading since July 2005.

cips manufacturing

More worrying, the index for tracking output prices rose to 62 . The index has now suffered the most sustained period of output inflation in the series’ history.

Roy Ayliffe, Director of Professional Practice at CIPS, said, “Purchasing managers in the sector continued to face record inflationary pressures, which they tackled by curbing input buying activity and passing soaring fuel, transportation and food costs on to clients.”

What is worrying, both in the UK and US, is that this time around it is the consumer who is in trouble, and yet manufacturing, the sector that should be booming, what with the falling dollar and pound, is suffering too.

But at least it is encouraging that signs have been pointing to a US pick up. The danger though, Stateside, is that low interest rates will lead to surging inflation, which will force the Fed to up rates rapidly, and perhaps send the economy back down again.

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Manufacturers up the ante

Oh deary, deary.  Whichever way you look at it, the latest Industrial Trends survey from the CBI is not good.The May headline index is in negative territory -10.  In fact, 21 per cent of firms rated their total order book as above normal and 31 per cent  said it was below, giving a balance of -10. It has been worse, in fact last month it was a little worse, but even so, at a time when consumers are suffering, what we need is for manufacturers to take up the baton, so it is especially worrying they appear to be under the cosh.But, alas, that’s the best bit.The highest balance of manufacturing firms since 1995 have told the CBI their products will get more expensive over the coming three months, as rising oil prices drive up costs.       More to the point, manufacturers are planning to pass on these extra costs.The CBI says that despite shrinking demand, 36 per cent of manufacturers expect they will put their prices up over the next quarter, compared to just 6 per cent who say they will fall.  The balance of +30 is the strongest since February 1995 (+31).

Now, in the past,  these CBI surveys do seem to pre-date official data by several months.    For example, a year ago, the CBI made headlines when its index for measuring output prices hit 25, yet it wasn’t for another 4 months that the official data started to reflect this.   So the omens for later this year are not good.

 output prices CBI versus ONS

But to cap it all, the CBI export index is down too, hitting -12 in May, the lowest level for some time.

Ian McCafferty, chief economic adviser at the CBI, said:

“It is clear from the pricing data in the survey that manufacturers are really feeling the impact and having to pass their increasing costs on. Oil prices rose more than 75% over the last year, and 14% in the past month alone.

“These rising inflationary pressures make it ever more unlikely that we will see the cuts in interest rates expected by the markets only a few weeks ago.

“The survey also shows that the sector is now being affected by the slowdown seen in other areas of the economy. For the second month in a row firms are saying orders are below normal and that output levels will be flat.”

CBI manufacturing

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Services follow manufacturing into the mire

Before you read, we would like to recommend you sit down.     This is not going to be good.   In the last few days the Chartered Institute of Purchasing and Supply (CIPS) have released their latest data on manufacturing and services – and it is not pleasant.

But first, here is a whiff of good news.   The CIPS Purchasing Managers index fell to 51 – okay, that is lower than last month’s score, or the month before that, but it has been much lower than that before.   It was marginally lower in January, and three years ago, was down to just 47.1.    In fact, CIPS has anything above 50 as suggesting expansion in the sector, and the index has now been above 50 for 44 months, so that is good.

But output price inflation hit a new series record high.  As for the rate of increase in factory gate prices, this has now reached new highs in every month this year.  The  New Orders index recorded a reading of 49.5 – its lowest in almost three years, but perhaps more worrying, and a little puzzling, the index for tracking export orders fell to 49.1  This index has been below the 50 no-change mark for four months.

This is of course contrary to what it should be like.   Exports are supposed to provide our big hope. Manufacturers are supposed to be reaping the harvest of a lower pound relative to the euro and picking up the baton from exhausted consumers.

Never mind, there’s always services.

Alas, the latest CIPS Business Activity index for services  fell to 50.4, the lowest level since April 2003.

What is especially worrisome about the CIPS services index is that it does not include retail.

You may say, okay that’s not good, but even so, the CIPS index recorded a worse showing in 2003 – and yet back then the economy did all right.  Sure, manufacturing is not expanding at the pace it had been expanding at, but at least it is moving forward.

The point though is that in 2003 when the CIPS service index was lower, the housing market was in the midst of a boom, which in turn pulled up consumer spending.

It does feel as though we are losing out on all quarters.

This is only anecdotal evidence, of course, the official statistics are altogether more upbeat.

In that TV series Dallas, when Sue Ellen caught JR red-handed, the man TV audiences loved to hate said, “Sue Ellen, are you going to believe me, or your lying eyes?”     The question now is, are you going to believe the official data, or the lying surveys? 

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CIPS reveals Godzilla of economic data

The latest report from the Chartered Institute of Purchasing and Supply (CIPS) is the stuff central bankers’ nightmares are made of.

It seems whichever way a central banker views the report, he or she is sure to come out in a cold sweat.

The Purchasing Managers Index, published by CIPS, fell to 50.1 in January, that’s the lowest level since August 2005. The good news, anything above 50 signifies expansion, so CIPS are not saying we are in a manufacturing recession yet, just very close. But, the New Orders Index, which provides an indication of how the sector is moving, fell to 49.7.

CIPS said, “The rate of contraction was only slight but companies reported lacklustre demand, particularly in key foreign markets.“ So that’s a worry, consumers are off the boil, we all know that, and with the pound falling, we need exporters to take up the slack, and start exporting. Yet the CIPS New Export Orders Index fell to 47.6, reflecting, as CIPS put it, “the effect of the softer economic conditions in a number of key markets, most noticeably in the US.”

Now, in the UK, the manufacturing sector has this tendency to play with recession, like a child with his favourite toy.

But, right now, we need our manufacturers more than ever, and we need them to get exporting.

Okay, so none of that is good. But why should central bankers, whose remit is merely to worry about inflation, be fretting?

Well, the answer to that lies with the prices our manufacturers are being charged, and the prices they are then charging their customers.

The CIPS prices paid index shot up to 69.3, the highest level since July 2006.

But, more to the point, the prices charged index leapt to 57.9, the highest level ever recorded.

So that’s an industry heading for recession, while prices are soaring. There is a word to describe that, and that word is stagflation.

Have you seen that film Cloverfield yet? In a cynical, age, when we think we have seen just about all the frights Hollywood can conjure, it is a truly scary monster flick, perhaps having a similar impact on audiences to that the original King Kong had when it was released.

But, for Mervyn King and chums, the latest CIPS data, must be even-more frightening.

CIPS

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