ISM Index Still Low at an Expected 50.8
December 3, 2007
By Tom Moeller
· Last month's PMI figure remained the lowest since January when industrial production in the factory sector fell 0.6% and the three month % change in factory sector output fell to 0.4%. · During the last twenty years there has been a 64% correlation between the level of the Composite Index and the three month growth in factory sector industrial production. · It is appropriate to correlate the ISM index level with factory sector growth because the ISM index is a diffusion index. It measures growth by being constructed using all of the absolute positive changes in activity added to one half of the no change in activity measures.
· Some of that decline in employment was offset by a rise in production. · The index of new export orders rose sharply m/m to 58.5, its highest level since this past May. The import index conversely remained at the October level (47.5), the lowest level since 2001. That suggests imports declined last month. · The Unsustainable US Current Account Position Revisited* is a 2005 National Bureau of Economic Research working paper by Maurice Obtsfeld & Kenneth Rogoff and the abstract from it can be found here.
· Asian nations driving world oil prices from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis is available here.
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November |
October |
October '06 |
2006 |
2005 |
2004 |
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Composite Index |
50.8 |
50.9 |
49.9 |
53.9 |
55.5 |
60.5 |
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New Orders Index |
52.6 |
52.5 |
49.7 |
55.4 |
57.4 |
63.5 |
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Prices Paid Index (NSA) |
67.5 |
63.0 |
53.5 |
65.0 |
66.4 |
79.8 |