Dallas Fed manufacturing index -19.4 vs -14.5 prior | Forexlive
- Prior was -14.5
Details:
- General business activity -19.4 vs -14.5 prior
- Output -2.8 vs +4.8 prior
- Prices paid +20.4 vs +11.2 prior
- New orders -2.2 vs -5.3 prior
- Shipments -3.0 vs +5.0 prior
- Employment -5.3 vs -0.1 prior
There has been a slowdown in oil and gas drilling in Texas so some of the drop could reflect that.
Food manufacturing
- Recent developments in the overall economy suggest consumers
are resilient and still spending money. Though the Federal Reserve is
unlikely to lower interest rates any time soon, the market seems to have
adjusted to the delay. Inflation will continue to decline, slowly. - Volume of new orders has picked up. Demand feels more robust
right now than at the beginning of the year. We are still battling cost
inflation on raw materials. - We are still trying to find competent people who want to work.
The biggest problem is turnover of new hires. Long-term employees are
stable. Young people do not want to work.
Paper manufacturing
- Orders are down approximately 10 percent.
Printing and related support activities
- We have been very busy and having “hooray” billing months with
very nice profits, but that is about to change as things seem to be
slowing down, and we can tell that this may be a lean summer. We are
fortunate to have some nice projects to carry us through the summer and
help cover overhead, but we need additional work to make it be
profitable. Our competitors have been really slow, so this does not bode
well for our next few months.
Primary metal manufacturing
- Our building and construction business remains off. Higher
mortgage rates and higher home costs are the main factors. Fewer folks
are buying first-time homes. More younger couples are moving into
apartments.
Fabricated metal product manufacturing
- Things seem to be slowing down in our manufacturing sector.
- We have orders, but jobs are not being released due to financing holds and uncertainty.
Machinery manufacturing
- Business is flat at a relatively low level.
- It isn’t much fun to be in business right now, at least in our
industry. Our sales team is putting forth a full-court press effort, and
we’ve attempted to add services and product offerings to complement
what we do, but it’s just tough sledding and has been all year.
Computer and electronic product manufacturing
- We are reaching a cyclical bottom for most end markets after
the post-COVID inventory build. We are expecting shipments to more
closely follow end-market demand in the second half of 2024. - Customer volumes are decreasing due to the economy. They are
still bullish, but indicators based on outbound shipments show there
will be fewer shipments in the future. Technology changes with AI
[artificial intelligence] have increased technology deployment and are
possibly going to increase production, but it’s too early to be a
contribution to growth in the next six to 12 months. - Wage inflation continues to be our biggest issue. We are caught
between a rock and a hard place; we have to increase wages to keep our
best employees, but we also have to invest capital to improve
productivity so we can eventually do more with fewer people. The
combined result is substantially less free cash flow for this year and
next. The tax increases that President Biden has announced as part of
his reelection campaign will have a very significant negative impact on
our ability to grow. We will be forced to slow down capital investment
and reduce head count if he is reelected.
Transportation equipment manufacturing
- Things are in a mess.