I never used to pay much attention to the ISM non-manufacturing report. That is partly because it only has a 20 year history, and partly because it seems to be more coincident than leading:But because manufacturing has faded so much as a share of the US economy, with at least two false recession signal in the past 10 years (2015-16 and 2022-23):There is no choice but to pay more attention.In particular, it does seem that when we include this as part of a weighted average (75%) along with the ISM manufacturing index (25%), it has generated a much more reliable, and still timely, reading over this Millennium (note: graph ends last summer):On Monday, the ISM manufacturing index, and its more leading new orders component, came in poor. But the non-manufacturing index this morning completely outweighed that in its strength. Here are the last five months of both the manufacturing (left column) and non-manufacturing index (center) numbers, and their weighted average (right):JAN 49.1. 53.4. 52.3FEB 47.8 52.6. 51.4MAR 50.3. 51.4. 51.1APR 49.2 49.4. 49.3 MAY 48.9. 53.8. 52.5And here is the same data for the new orders components:JAN 52.5. 55.0. 54.4FEB 49.2 56.1. 54.4MAR 51.4. 54.4. 53.6APR 49.1. 52.2. 51.4MAY 45.4. 54.1. 51.9Only the weighted average for the total indexes for one month, April, comes in below 50. To generate a reliable signal, we would need the 3 month average to be below 50, which it clearly is not. The new orders weighted average for all months is unambiguously positive.The signal for the combined weighted ISM indexes remains expansionary in its forecast for the next few months.More By This Author:April JOLTS ReportMay New Manufacturing Orders Slide, Truck Sales Rise, Construction Spending Close To Unchanged April Personal Income And Spending: A Flat Report Consistent With Either A Temporary Pause Or Weakness Ahead