Indicators suggest rebound in US faltering
Fears that the US recovery is losing steam were reinforced on Thursday as a stream of new data on the health of the economy, from manufacturing to housing to the labour market, came in below expectations.
Growth in the manufacturing sector appears to be slowing and one indicator showed the first possible signs of damage to US exporters from the European sovereign debt crisis.
The Institute for Supply Managements overall manufacturing index fell from 59.7 in May to 56.2 in June, a much larger drop than predicted by economists, who were looking for a reading of 59.
Although any reading above 50 indicates an expansion in manufacturing activity, this is now the second consecutive monthly drop. Some components of the survey were particularly discouraging, with the employment and new orders gauges dropping.
Meanwhile, new export orders, which had been consistently above 60 in recent months, fell back to 56, which could be an early sign that the drop in the value of the euro and weaker European demand will hurt US producers.
No solace for observers of the US economy came from data on the troubled housing market. The National Association of Realtors reported that pending home sales, a measure of activity in home purchases that have been agreed but not completed, tumbled by 30 per cent in May, much worse than the 12.5 per cent drop predicted by economists. A decline was widely predicted but the extent has brought renewed fears of a housing double-dip.
Posted by: lotp 2010-07-02 |