ISM chart and excerpts below by permission from the Institute for Supply Management® ISM®Please consider the Please consider the June 2024 Services ISM® Report On Business®
emphasis mine.
The report was issued today by Steve Miller, CPSM, CSCP, Chair of the Institute for Supply Management® (ISM®) Services Business Survey Committee: “In June, the Services PMI® registered 48.8 percent, 5 percentage points lower than May’s figure of 53.8 percent. The reading in June was a reversal compared to May and the second in contraction territory in the last three months. Before April, the services sector grew for 15 straight months following a composite index reading of 49 percent in December 2022; the last contraction before that was in May 2020 (45.4 percent). The Business Activity Index registered 49.6 percent in June, which is 11.6 percentage points lower than the 61.2 percent recorded in May and the first month of contraction since May 2020. The New Orders Index contracted in June for the first time since December 2022; the figure of 47.3 percent is 6.8 percentage points lower than the May reading of 54.1 percent. The Employment Index contracted for the sixth time in seven months and at a faster rate in June; the reading of 46.1 percent is a 1-percentage point decrease compared to the 47.1 percent recorded in May.
Miller continues, “The decrease in the composite index in June is a result of notably lower business activity, a contraction in new orders for the second time since May 2020 and continued contraction in employment. Survey respondents report that in general, business is flat or lower, and although inflation is easing, some commodities have significantly higher costs. Panelists indicate that slower supplier delivery performance is due primarily to transportation challenges, not increases in demand.”
Respondent Comments
Stagflationary CommentsFor 85 consecutive months, prices have increased.Eight of ten respondent comments complained of prices.This reeks of stagflation.
Unexpected ReportThe Bloomberg Economists Consensus was a reading of 53.0 in a range of 52.0 to 55.5.The actual report was 3.2 percentage points below the lowest economist’s estimate.
ISM Manufacturing New Orders and Backlogs in Steep ContractionOn June 3, I reported ISM Manufacturing New Orders and Backlogs in Steep Contraction
The Manufacturing ISM was in contraction for 16 months went positive for a month and is contracting again for two months with order backlogs falling for 20 months.
Services have joined the party with a stagflationary-looking report.
Expect another big dive in GDPNow
Details shortly
— Mike “Mish” Shedlock (@MishGEA) July 3, 2024
As always, it is not the data that matter but what the model forecast.However, I highly doubt the model expected the two terrible reports today and a third bad one.The other terrible report was factory orders and the bad one was international trade. I will comment shortly.More By This Author:How Much Are State and Local Government Workers Overpaid?Job Quits Spotlight A Dramatic Weakening Of The Labor Market Manufacturing ISM Contracts For The 19th Time In The Last 20 Months