Dallas Fed March manufacturing index -15.7 vs -13.5 prior | Forexlive
Details:
- Production index +2.5 vs -2.8 prior
- New
 orders index -14.3 vs -13.2 prior — 10th month in a row negative
- Growth rate of orders -15.2 versus -16.9 last month
- Employment +10.4 versus -1.0 last month
- Hours worked +2.6 versus +4.9 last month
- Capital expenditures +2.9 versus -1.3 last month
- Wages and benefits +30.5 versus +32.7last month
- Prices received +7.0 versus +15.8 last month
- Prices paid for raw materials +20.3 versus +25.1 last month
- Finished goods inventory +6.6 versus -3.0 last month
- Shipments -10.5 versus -5.0 last month
I would highlight the pricing sub-indexes here and their steady declines. That’s bodes well for inflation.
Selected comments in the report:
- We continue to struggle to find qualified  manufacturing employees. We
 are investing heavily in automation to increase productivity and allow
 us to meet demand without adding head count.
- We are closely monitoring the banking meltdown with customers and suppliers. There has been minimal impact so far.
- We expected things to cyclically slow, and all  markets are correcting
 except auto. We expect once inventories reduce from elevated levels, we
 will begin to ship closer to end demand, likely mid-to-late second
 half 2023.
- Activity has picked up. We are cautiously  optimistic regarding activity
 this year. Downward risk factors (inflation , workforce, and global
 security threats) are still more significant than the potential
 economic tailwinds.
- The current market upheaval with bank failures  and inflation is still
 above acceptable levels and the main driver of my thoughts. How this is
 handled in the near term will impact the future exponentially. Higher
 interest rates could mean more bank failures. The government cannot
 insure all deposits in all the banks. I do not see any price pressure
 on raw materials in the near term. Labor is still a problem; finding
 and retaining good employees is challenging.
- We are holding steady at current revenue; however, there are many uncertainties that are causing us to be extremely cautious.
- Our outlook is horrible. The level of certainty is zero. Production is hand to mouth. We cannot find workers.
- We are laying off workers for the first time since 2010.
- We continue to see new orders coming in,  sustaining the price increase
 we implemented due to increased labor and material costs. We hope this
 holds up but are worried that the slowdown we are seeing may create
 competitive pressures on maintaining price margins. It is still very
 tough to find employees wanting or willing to work. Perhaps we need to
 loosen up on immigration restrictions to help with this shortage of
 laborers.
