Preliminary
data released by IHS Markit on Monday revealed that U.S. private sector
business activity continued to grow in early August, albeit at a softer pace
than in July.
According
to the report, the Markit flash manufacturing purchasing manager's index (PMI)
came in at 61.2 in August, down from 63.4 in July. The latest reading pointed
to the slowest expansion in factory activity since April s,
but substantial nonetheless. Economists had expected the reading to decrease to
62.8. A reading above 50 signals an expansion in activity, while a reading
below this level signals a contraction. Material shortages and pressure on
capacity led to a slowdown in output growth. The rate of increase in production
was the weakest since March. Challenges fulfilling new orders and an unprecedented
deterioration in vendor performance led to the second-steepest advance in
backlogs of work in the over 14-year series history. In addition, difficulties retaining
employees and finding suitable candidates led to the slowest growth in
workforce numbers in 2021-to-date.
The
Markit flash services purchasing manager's index (PMI) dropped to 55.2 in August,
down from 59.9 in the previous month. This was the lowest reading since December
2020. Economists had expected the reading to slip to 59.5. The slowdown in
activity growth was often linked to labour shortages, the spread of the Delta variant
and some instances of supply chain disruption. The rate of expansion of new
business decelerated to the softest in a year. Meanwhile, the rate of job creation
was the slowest since February amid a high turnover in staff. On the price
front, input costs rose significantly and at one of the quickest paces on
record amid solid hikes in supplier prices and greater wage bills. Subsequently,
service providers increased their selling prices at a sharper rate.
Overall,
IHS Markit Flash U.S. Composite PMI Output Index came in at 55.4 in August, down
noticeably from 59.9 in July. This represented an eight-month low.
“The
expansion slowed sharply again in August as the spread of the Delta variant led
to a weakening of demand growth, especially for consumer-facing services, and
further frustrated firms’ efforts to meet existing sales,” noted Chris
Williamson, Chief Business Economist at HIS Markit. ““Not only have supply
chain delays hit a new survey record high, but the August survey saw increasing
frustrations in relation to hiring. Jobs growth waned to the lowest since July
of last year as companies either failed to find suitable staff or existing
workers switched jobs.”
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