Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics

Economy in Brief

    • Light trucks lead the increase.
    • Imports' market share remains below its high.
    • Durable goods orders advance, nondurable goods industries see decline.
    • Total shipments rise after 3 monthly declines.
    • Durable goods inventories rise modestly in May while nondurable goods inventories drop.
    • Gasoline prices decline to three-week low.
    • Crude oil prices ease.
    • Natural gas prices continue to rise.
  • Among the 25 countries/regions reporting composite PMIs that reflect the manufacturing and services sectors of their respective economies, only four show improvement in June. Those four are Russia, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, and Egypt. The domination of oil producers on the list is notable. We mark Zambia as unchanged as its data are unavailable in June. We use the May value for June only in the case of Zambia. This overall result is a substantial step-down and worsening from May when only 13 reporters logged worsening. In April, only 7 had cited a worsening.

    The sequential averages show worsening over 3-months compared to 6-months in only seven reporters, a worsening at 6-months compared to 12-months for only five reporters and a worsening over 12-months compared to 12-months ago in 14 reporters.

    Some weakening The month’s data are sharply weaker (month-to-month), showing much more breadth of weakening than what we've seen in some time although the PMI averages have not so sharply deteriorated. The average PMI stands at 52.1 in June and the 12-month average is 51.5. That compares to a 3-month average at 53.0; its 6-month average is at 52.3. This sequence shows improving PMI averages over shorter, timelier, periods (except month-to-month). The medians also show improvements from 51 over 12 months to 52.3 over 6 months to 53.0 over 3 months. However, in the month-to-month data, the April reading is 53.8, rising to 54.0 in May and then dropping to 51.5 in June. The median and the averages both show a fall-off in June; however, the PMI values remain above 50 indicating economic expansion based upon the comprehensive composite PMI readings.

    Little contraction PMI readings show composite PMI is below 50 in June indicating contraction for only five countries; that compares to three in May and three in April. For the three-month average, there's only three weaker compared to six-months; for the six-month average there's only three weaker than over 12 months. For the 12-month average, there's only five weaker than a year-ago. While there is great concern about a coming global slowdown and potentially a global recession based upon composite PMIs, there aren't many countries or regions now that are experiencing contraction.

    Much weakening in June On a month-to-month basis, there's a much more significant indication of slowing with 20 of 25 reporters showing weaker values in June compared to May. That compares to 13 in May compared to April and 6 for April compared to March. Over three months there are seven out of 25 that show weakening compared to six months; over six months there are five that show weakening compared to 12 months, but over 12 there are 18 that show weakening compared to 12-months ago. Even so, we can see that the tendency for weakening is mostly a month-to-month phenomenon that has emerged in June. It is not yet indicative of the broader trends.

    Standings are weak and mixed The queue percentile standings place the current observations in an ordered queue of data back to January 2019; it shows the average standing at the 53.4 percentile mark and a median standing at the 50-percentile mark. That means that the median for the group over the period is at such a level that it corresponds to the median value for each reporter on average. There are 12 of 25 of the reporters with composites below the historic medians on this timeline.

    • 46.0 in June vs. 46.9 in May; below 50 for the eighth consecutive month.
    • New orders contract for the 10th straight month; production contracts for the sixth month in seven.
    • Employment contracts following two months of expansion.
    • Prices index declines to a six-month low.
  • Among the eighteen reporters of manufacturing PMIs in June, only seven improve on a month-to-month basis. The table treats Canada as unchanged. Its June value is not available; for the purposes of statistics and aggregation, we're using the May value for Canada in June.

    Over 3 months, 7 reporters show improved reading compared to 6 months. Over 6 months compared to 12 months, 8 reporters showed improvements in their manufacturing PMIs. Over 12 months compared to their level of 12-months ago, only four reporters show improvement: those are Mexico, Russia, India, and Indonesia.

    For the most part, manufacturing continues to be under a great deal of pressure. The median reading for this group of countries this month is 47.8 on a PMI basis. However, despite the breadth of the deterioration, the median measure has not changed very much over the three horizons. In the table, over 12 months the PMI average is 48.8, over 6 months it falls to 48.1, and over 3 months it stabilizes at 48.2. All of these diffusion values show manufacturing activity declining on balance (all below 50), but declines are not getting worse according to the median statistics although they are getting worse based upon deteriorating breadth.

    The ranking statistics show only five of these reporting entities with June readings above their historic medians. India has a strong 92-percentile standing, Mexico has an 88.5 percentile standing, Russia reports an 84.6 percentile standing, Indonesia has a 78.8 percentile standing, and Turkey has a 71-percentile standing. Apart from those, the standing of the other countries is generally much worse with the highest among the remaining countries being Japan at 48.1% and after Japan the next highest ranking being at 19.2% for Taiwan and for South Korea.

    For some of the larger economies, the U.S. has a ranking for its S&P Global manufacturing PMI at its 5.8percentile, the euro area is at its 3.8 percentile, and the U.K. is at its 9.6 percentile. The large countries show a great deal of weakness in their manufacturing sectors; Japan is an exception.

    Comparing these readings to where they were in January 2020 before COVID struck, there are only six countries that show better manufacturing PMI values in June 2023 than they had in January 2020. These are Russia that has a 4.7-point improvement, Indonesia that has a 3.2-point improvement, India that has a 2.5-point improvement, Mexico that has a 2.0-point improvement, Japan that has a 1.0-point improvement, and Turkey that has a 0.2-point improvement. By comparison, the median shows the decline of 1.7 points compared to January 2020. The euro area is weaker by 4.5 points and the U.S. is weaker by 5.6 points.

    • Index rise is minimal after sharp decline.
    • Component changes are mixed.
    • Prices paid index falls to three-year low.
    • Real spending has been steady for roughly four months.
    • Personal income growth reflects firm wages.
    • Price index growth slows.