Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics
USA
| Jan 15 2026

U.S. Empire State Manufacturing Index Returns to Positive Territory in January

Summary
  • General Business Conditions Index up 11.4 pts. to 7.7 in January.
  • Positive: Shipments (16.3, highest since Nov. ’24) and new orders (6.6).
  • Negative: Employment (-9.0, lowest since Jan. ’24), unfilled orders (-8.2), and inventories (-2.1, a four-month low).
  • Prices paid at a 10-month-low 42.8 and prices received at a one-year-low 14.4.
  • Firms fairly optimistic: Future Business Conditions Index down to a still-positive 30.3; future prices paid at a one-year-low 52.6.

The Empire State Manufacturing Index of General Business Conditions rose to a higher-than-expected 7.7 in January following a 17.2-drop to -3.7 in December, according to the Empire State Manufacturing Survey released by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. A reading of 1.0 for January had been expected in the Action Economics Forecast Survey. The positive January figure indicated that the business activity in New York State expanded for the third time in four months; it was an improvement from -7.4 in January 2025 and a low of -29.7 in January 2024, though still below a high of 16.8 in November 2024. The percentage of respondents reporting an increase in general business conditions was 34.2% in January, up from 31.7% in December; the percentage reporting a decrease was 26.5%, down from December’s 35.4%. The latest survey was conducted between January 2 and January 9.

The headline index reflects the answer to a single question concerning the state of economic activity and is not calculated from the components. Haver Analytics calculates a composite index from the five major components, which is comparable to the ISM manufacturing index. This calculated index increased to 51.2 in January following a 4.2-point decline to the neutral-level 50.0 in December (the lowest level since September); it was slightly up from 50.7 in January 2025 and well above a low of 43.0 in January 2024. The index is the average of five diffusion indexes: new orders, shipments, employment, supplier deliveries and inventories with equal weights (20% each).

In the latest survey, the new orders index rose to 6.6 in January after a 10.6-point drop to -1.0 in December, marking the third m/m gain in orders in four months and a sharp improvement from a low of -30.7 in January 2024. The shipments index jumped to 16.3 in January, the highest level since November 2024, following a 16.5-point fall to -5.0 in December; it was well above a low of -21.7 in April 2024. The unfilled orders index improved to -8.2 in January after a 9.1-point decrease to -14.9 in December, indicating that unfilled orders contracted for the eighth straight month but at a less severe pace; the index reached a low of -24.2 in January 2024. The inventories index fell to -2.1 in January, the lowest level since September, after a 2.7-point decline to 4.0 in December, signaling the first inventory contraction since October. Meanwhile, the delivery times index increased to 0.0 in January from -5.9 in December, with 12.4% of respondents reporting longer delivery times and an identical 12.4% reporting shorter times, indicating that delivery times were unchanged.

On the labor front, the number of employees index fell to -9.0 in January after a 1.0-point increase to 7.5 in December, indicating that employment contracted for the first time since September and reached its lowest level since January 2024. The index remained well below a peak of 24.9 in February 2022. In January, only 7.9% of respondents reported an increase in employment while a higher 16.8% reported a decline. The average workweek index dropped to -5.4 in January from 2.5 in December, turning negative for the first time since October and hitting the lowest level since April 2025.

Inflation pressures eased in January but remained high. The prices paid index fell to 42.8 in January, the lowest level since March 2025, after a 5.9-point decrease to 44.2 in December. Although still well below a peak of 84.9 in April 2022, the index remained above a low of 25.9 in December 2024 and a low of 20.8 in December 2023. In January, 44.5% of respondents reported higher prices paid while only 1.7% reported lower prices paid. The prices received index fell to 14.4 in January, the lowest reading since January 2025, from 25.4 in December. The index was up from a low of 7.5 in December 2024 and a low of 7.7 in July 2023 but far below a high of 51.9 in March 2022. In January, 18.9% of respondents reported higher prices received while 4.4% reported lower prices received.

Firms remained fairly optimistic about the future business outlook in the latest survey. The index for future business conditions eased to 30.3 in January after rising to 33.5 in December, with 50.6% of respondents expecting business conditions to improve over the next six months. Future new orders edged down to 33.3 in January from 34.5 in December, while future shipments rose to 34.9—the highest level since March 2022—from December’s 30.7. Growth in future employment strengthened to 14.9, the highest reading since November 2024, from December’s 7.8. Capital spending plans remained positive for the third consecutive month in January, with the future capital expenditures index rising to 10.3 from December’s 6.9. Expected prices paid fell to 52.6 in January from 55.4 in December and expected prices received fell to 36.5 from 41.6, with both measures at their lowest levels since December 2024.

The indexes in this report are diffusion indexes and measure the percentage of respondents indicating an increase minus the percentage indicating a decrease with zero separating expansion from contraction.

The New York Fed survey data are contained in Haver’s SURVEYS database. The expectations series is in Haver’s AS1REPNA database.

  • Winnie Tapasanun has been working for Haver Analytics since 2013. She has 20+ years of working in the financial services industry. As Vice President and Economic Analyst at Globicus International, Inc., a New York-based company specializing in macroeconomics and financial markets, Winnie oversaw the company’s business operations, managed financial and economic data, and wrote daily reports on macroeconomics and financial markets. Prior to working at Globicus, she was Investment Promotion Officer at the New York Office of the Thailand Board of Investment (BOI) where she wrote monthly reports on the U.S. economic outlook, wrote reports on the outlook of key U.S. industries, and assisted investors on doing business and investment in Thailand. Prior to joining the BOI, she was Adjunct Professor teaching International Political Economy/International Relations at the City College of New York. Prior to her teaching experience at the CCNY, Winnie successfully completed internships at the United Nations.   Winnie holds an MA Degree from Long Island University, New York. She also did graduate studies at Columbia University in the City of New York and doctoral requirements at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Her areas of specialization are international political economy, macroeconomics, financial markets, political economy, international relations, and business development/business strategy. Her regional specialization includes, but not limited to, Southeast Asia and East Asia.   Winnie is bilingual in English and Thai with competency in French. She loves to travel (~30 countries) to better understand each country’s unique economy, fascinating culture and people as well as the global economy as a whole.

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