Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics

Economy in Brief: November 2022

  • Denmark's manufacturing purchasing managers index (from the Danish Purchasing and Logistics Forum) has risen to 52.1 in October from 49.6 in September. This ends a three-month streak of the index being below 50 indicating a contraction in the sector. And it's coming off a period of extremely high readings - readings as high as of 70 back in June 2022 and readings of over 60 from March through May before that.

    In October, there was an increase in the headline PMI, an increase in new orders, and an increase in production which we tend to view as the most important readings for the index. However, they are not the totality of the index. Weaker on the month was the employment reading, delivery speeds slowed, purchased inventories weakened, purchase prices weakened, the quantity of purchases weakened, and inventories of finished goods also weakened. Out of 8 components only 2 strengthened.

    Looking at momentum, the month's increase in October has tended to put a more positive spin on trend. The three-month change in the Danish manufacturing PMI index is positive; in fact, the three-month change is higher for all the components as well, except for the prices of purchased goods. This is less because of the gain in October and more because the three-month comparison is off a base in July that showed exceptional and not-representational weakness. Over six months conditions are slightly more mixed. The headline is still stronger, orders and production are stronger; in fact, most of the components are stronger, except for a weakening of employment and for purchase of inputs and for the prices of purchased inputs. The 12-month change shows lower readings everywhere: the headline is lower, and all the components are lower.

    Over the last 12 months the headline has an average rating of 57.7 which is stronger than the October reading of 52.1. Most of the components have readings above 50 for their 12-month averages indicating expansion. The exceptions are inventories of purchased inputs and the inventories of finished goods. Both of those inventory figures are below a diffusion value of 50 indicating that on balanced there has been ongoing contraction for inventories. Both inventory measures are decreasing, firms are holding smaller volumes of finished goods and as a result they're also holding smaller volumes of purchased inputs. However, the quantity of purchases has been holding up with the 12-month reading average of 58.7 although that metric takes a beating this month as it falls to 26.2.

    While the manufacturing sector shows that there has been expansion and expansion in most of the categories over 12 months on average, in October we see some significant weakening compared to the average. The quantity of purchases, in fact, has the weakest reading with the diffusion value of 26.2 in October; the next weakest reading is delivery speeds indicating that firms can fill orders extremely quickly, hinting at some spare capacity. Inputs of inventory are at 49.9 in October, stronger than the inventories of finished goods which are at a reading of 41.5. While we found that there were increases across most components on the month, a closer look at this finds the new orders reading only at 51.0, barely showing expansion after weak readings showed contraction in the earlier three months.

    The Danish data are confusing since we see some important topical weakness in October and yet we see broad improvements over the last three months. The reasons it's broad improvements over the last three months is that four months ago in June there was an extremely strong diffusion reading for the headline at 70 and corresponding strong readings up and down the line for the components. Still, the base for the three-month comparison is distorted sapping these gains of their meaning

    Moreover, when we look at the current readings compared to values of 12 months ago, we find declines up and down the line with the exceptions ironically only for the two inventory measures. Over 12 months the manufacturing PMI itself is lower by some 19 diffusion points, new orders are lower by some 25 diffusion points, delivery speeds are lower by 50 diffusion points, and the quantity of inputs purchased is lower by nearly 48 diffusion points.

    Ranking the Danish PMIs in October The ranking of the October data on values back to the year 2000, a better than 20-year frame of comparison, gives us a headline PMI with a 28.8 percentile standing which places that well below its historic median. The median for the ranking statistics always occurs at a ranking of 50. Values above 50 are above their median and values below 50 are below their median. For Danish manufacturing, our values are below their median except for inventories of inputs which have a 73-percentile standing. After that, the next strongest reading is for the prices of purchases, which have a 43.4 percentile standing still, below their median. The weakest reading in October over this 20 plus year period is for the quantity of purchases with a 1.1 percentile standing. These data clearly began to look like Danish manufacturers are starting to batten down the hatches and prepare for demand slowdown. The quantity of purchases is extremely weak, and their delivery speeds are extremely fast with a 5.8% standing; low readings on delivery speeds mean that delivery speeds are fast- slow readings and delivery speeds indicate more heated economic activity. In this case, no lags have crept into the process. New orders have only a 21.2 percentile standing, and employment has only a 25.5 percentile standing.

  • In October, the manufacturing readings worsen in 16 of the 18 reporting countries/regions. However, of 18 countries and regions reporting in the table, only eight show manufacturing PMI values above 50 indicating that their respective manufacturing sectors are still expanding.

    The countries that show manufacturing expanding in October according to the S&P manufacturing PMIs are India, the United States, Brazil, Indonesia, Vietnam, Japan, Russia, and Mexico. Taiwan has the weakest manufacturing reading in the table in October at 41.5, Germany’s reading is 45.7, Turkey registers 46.4, and the European Monetary Union comes in at 46.6. Those best-worst comparisons show the economic performances mixed between the largest and the smallest economies as of October; however, nothing is particularly strong. The strongest reading in the table is India at 55.3 and after that Indonesia at 51.8. These are not impressive numbers.

    The sequential comparisons show that over three months there are only three countries that are improved over three months compared to their six-month averages; over six months there are only four countries that are improved compared to their 12-month averages; over 12 months there are seven countries that are improved compared to their 12-month averages from 12-months ago. The breadth of improvement is on the decline from 12 months to six-months to three-months that's clear. Over three months the countries that report improvement are Russia, India, and Indonesia. Over six months the countries that report improvement are Mexico, Russia, India, and Brazil. Over 12 months the countries that register improvement are Japan, China, Russia, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Vietnam. Given the sanctions imposed on Russia, and other anecdotal evidence, the Russian PMI reports for manufacturing are suspect….

    The percentile standing data on the far right of the table show that there are only three countries that have readings this month that are above their historic medians calculated over the last 4 ½ years; those three countries are Mexico, Russia, and Indonesia. Taiwan is showing the weakest reading of this period. France’s reading is a bottom 6% and it is joined by Canada, the U.K., the U.S., and the euro area as countries or economic units that have standings in the lower 10 percentile of their historic ranges. The median standing for the full queue rankings in October is a 20.8 percentile standing, an extremely weak figure for the median.

    • Sales rise to highest level in nine months.
    • Auto & light trucks strengthen equally.
    • Imported vehicle gain lags somewhat.
    • 50.2 in Oct. vs. 50.9 in Sept.; the fourth m/m decline in PMI in five months.
    • New orders contract for the fourth time in five months.
    • Employment rebounds to 50 (the contraction-expansion dividing line) from a contraction-level 48.7.
    • Production rises to a three-month-high 52.3, indicating expansions for 29 straight months.
    • Prices decrease w/ the prices index falling to 46.6, the lowest reading since May '20.
    • The number of job openings rise broadly.
    • New hires decline for fourth month in the last five.
    • But separations decline sharply as quits & layoffs decline.
    • Residential construction remained challenged by rising interest rates; nonresidential building rebounded.
    • Public sector construction declined for second month.
    • Gasoline prices fall further.
    • Crude oil prices improve from three-week low.
    • The cost of natural gas declines again.