Manufacturing in U.S. Unexpectedly Contracted in June

Manufacturing in the U.S. unexpectedly shrank in June for the first time since the economy emerged from the recession three years ago, indicating a mainstay of the expansion may be faltering.

The Institute for Supply Management’s index fell to 49.7, worse than the most-pessimistic forecast in a Bloomberg News survey, from 53.5 in May, the Tempe, Arizona-based group’s report showed today. Figures less than 50 signal contraction. Measures of orders, production and export demand dropped to three-year lows.


Treasury yields fell on concern Europe’s debt crisis and a slowdown in Asia are taking a bigger toll on the world’s largest economy and hurting manufacturers like DuPont Co. (DD) and Steelcase Inc. (SCS) Assembly lines are at risk of slowing further as consumers temper purchases and companies cut back on investment.

“Manufacturing is gearing down,” said Neil Dutta, head of U.S. economics at Renaissance Macro Research LLC in New York, whose 50.5 forecast was the lowest in the Bloomberg survey. “It’s consistent with the idea that the uncertainty is weighing on businesses. Europe is taking a bite out of the export sector.”

The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note declined to 1.59 percent from 1.65 percent on June 29. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index erased earlier losses after last week capping its best June rally since 1999. The S&P 500 climbed 0.3 percent to 1,365.51 at the close in New York.

The ISM index, which dropped to its lowest level since July 2009, was less than the median forecast of 52 in the Bloomberg survey. Estimates of 70 economists ranged from 50.5 to 53.5. The gauge averaged 55.2 in 2011 and 57.3 the prior year.
No Recession

Today’s reading is well above the 42.6 level that generally indicates the economy as a whole is expanding, according to ISM.

“We are not yet in recession territory,” Nigel Gault, chief U.S. economist at IHS Global Insight in Lexington, Massachusetts, said in an e-mail to clients. “Recessions are usually accompanied by ISM readings in the low-40s. And the construction news is improving, while consumers are being helped by tumbling gasoline prices.”

A separate report today from the Commerce Department in Washington showed the improvement in the housing market helped boost construction spending in May to the highest level in two years. Housing demand has shown a gradual recovery. Purchases of new houses rose 7.6 percent in May to reach the highest level since April 2010, recent data showed.

Manufacturing is also weaker in the rest of the world. The industry in the euro-area contracted for an 11th straight month in June as Europe’s debt crisis sapped demand. A measure of the region’s factories held at 45.1, London-based Markit Economics said.
Europe’s Economy

Euro-area unemployment reached the highest on record in May, other figures showed. The jobless rate in the 17-nation region rose to 11.1 percent, the highest since the data series began in 1995, from 11 percent a month earlier, the European Union’s statistics office in Luxembourg said.

A manufacturing purchasing managers’ index for China fell to 48.2 in June from 48.4 a month earlier, HSBC Holdings Plc and Markit said today.

The ISM’s U.S. production index decreased to 51, the lowest since May 2009. The new orders measure dropped to 47.8, the weakest since April 2009, from 60.1. The drop in demand from the previous month was biggest since October 2001, after the September 11 terrorist attacks.

The employment gauge decreased to a three-month low. The index of prices paid decreased to 37 from 47.5.

Manufacturing accounts for about 12 percent of the economy and has been at the forefront of the recovery that began June 2009.
Jobless Rate

Slower hiring and an unemployment rate exceeding 8 percent may keep restraining household spending, which accounts for about 70 percent of the economy. Cars and light trucks sold at a 13.7 million annual rate in May, the weakest this year and down from April’s 14.4 million pace, Ward’s Automotive Group data showed.

Executives at Wilmington, Delaware-based DuPont said while growth in North America is holding up, the third-largest U.S. chemical maker is concerned about a slowdown in China and Germany’s dependence on exports.

“My number one worry is what will happen in Europe over the next six to nine months,” Diane Gulyas, group vice president of DuPont’s performance-materials segment, said on a conference call with analysts on June 14.
Steelcase Sales

Steelcase, a Grand Rapids, Michigan-based maker of office furniture, said first-quarter sales fell in most major markets in the region that includes Europe, Middle East and Africa.

“Uncertainty in the global economy continues to take its toll on specific parts of our business,” Chief Financial Officer David Sylvester said on a conference call on June 21.

The U.S. economy expanded 1.9 percent in the first quarter, the same as previously estimated and following a 3 percent pace in the prior three months, revised data showed last week.

To combat flagging growth, Federal Reserve policy makers said they are ready to take more steps should the U.S. expansion slacken.

Fed officials said in a policy statement on June 20 that they expect “economic growth to remain moderate over coming quarters and then to pick up very gradually.”

From : Bloomberg
 

El-Erian: Will Europe Amplify or Lessen Investors' July 4th Celebrations?

Expect heated discussions around some July 4th barbeques in the US - not just on the economy, elections and last week's Supreme Court ruling, but also on the follow-through to Friday's impressive surge in equity markets around the world.

Some see the trigger - the European summit - as lifting the dark clouds that have dampened investor enthusiasm and pose an "existential risk" for the euro area. Others remain skeptical, welcoming the better-than-expected outcome but characterizing it as insufficient over time.

Where investors end up on this spectrum boils down to whether they believe that European policy incrementalism can accumulate quickly into a beneficial tipping point; and this week will provide important insights on this. Let me explain.

It is highly significant that government leaders have evolved to the explicit pursuit of three major strategic initiatives that would place the eurozone's architecture in a much better place: namely, supplementing monetary union with fiscal union, banking union and greater political integration.

It is also significant that, by modifying regional crisis management mechanisms (and the ESM in particular), they understand the urgent need to break the vicious feedback loop between weak banks and deteriorating sovereign creditworthiness.

Unfortunately, government leaders are still falling short of the required policy breakthrough.

The policy timetable is still too timid given conditions on the ground, and the operational procedures too cumbersome. Funding lines for the emergency facilities remain partial and divergent national political narratives can confuse things (including statements over the weekend out of Finland, Germany and the Netherlands).


So, for the risk-on phase to build adequate momentum, Europe needs to add to its policy progress and also minimize headwinds. Over the next few days, investors will receive three important indicators on this.

First, investors will learn on Thursday whether last week's summit provides sufficient air cover for the ECB [cnbc explains] not just to cut its 1% benchmark rate by 25 to 50 basis points but also to support peripheral bonds (through the reactivation of the bond purchase program (SMP), another LTRO , or a new mechanism). It is not clear whether the central bank's governing council is there yet.

Second, they will monitor the resumption of negotiations between the Greek government and the Troika (consisting of the ECB, EU and IMF) - a complicated affair, especially as the assumptions underpinning prior agreements have been overtaken by unfavorable economic and financial developments. It is not clear who would put up the money to compensate for both this and for the new government's electoral commitment to stretch out the pace of domestic economic adjustment.

Lastly, Friday's monthly employment report out of the US will have an impact, and especially so after Monday's disappointing (ISM) manufacturing numbers.

For Europe to minimize external headwinds, the US needs both to avoid another sub-100,000 job creation print and to deliver improving indicators of long-term unemployment and labor force anticipation. Absent that, joblessness will again become a substantial leading indicator (and not just a lagging one), dampening consumer confidence, spending and companies' investment in plant and equipment - all of which would worsen employment prospects.

This week's July 4th holiday in the US will feature the traditional and enjoyable mix of parades and picnics, culminating with fireworks across the country. Throughout, investors will anxiously hope for additional policy measures, particularly out of Europe, that enable them to breathe easier and perhaps even add to their celebrations.

From CNBC