The
Institute for Supply Management (ISM) reported on Wednesday that its
non-manufacturing index (NMI) came in at 64.1 in July, which was 4.0 percentage
points higher than unrevised June’s reading of 60.1 percent. The latest reading pointed to the
growth in the services sector for the 14th straight month, which was also the fastest
on record.
Economists
forecast the index to increase to 60.5 last month. A reading above 50 signals
expansion, while a reading below 50 indicates contraction.
Of
the 18 services industries, 17 reported gains last month, the ISM said, even
though challenges with materials shortages, inflation, logistics and constrained
labor pool continued to be an issue.
According
to the report, the ISM’s non-manufacturing Production measure rose 6.6
percentage points to 67.0 percent from the June reading, while its New Orders
gauge increased 1.6 percentage points to 63.7 percent and the Employment
indicator went up 4.5 percentage points to 53.8 percent. Elsewhere, the Supplier
Deliveries index advanced 3.5 percentage points to 72.0 percent, while the
Inventories indicator decreased 0.7 percentage point to 49.2 percent. On the
price front, the Prices index increased 2.8 percentage points to 82.3 percent, recording
its second-highest reading ever, behind September 2005.
Commenting
on the data, the Chair of the ISM Services Business Survey Committee, Anthony
Nieves, noted, “The past relationship between the Services PMI and the overall
economy indicates that the Services PM for July (64.1 percent) corresponds to a
5.2-percent increase in real gross domestic product (GDP) on an annualized
basis.”
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