ISM Non-Manufacturing May 2010 Index - 55.4%

The ISM Non-manufacturing report for May 2010 is out. The overall index flat lined to 55.4%, exactly the same as the last two months 55.4%.

 

 

The employment index finally went above 50, at 50.4% and increased 0.9% from last month. That's the first time in 28 months employment changed direction to growth. New orders slowed. While still above 50, 57.1, new orders decreased from last month, by -1.1%. The April report showed a -4.1% drop in new orders. Business activity hit 61.1, up 0.8%. Below is the employment index graph, normalized to zero for the expansion/contraction 50 inflection point, followed by a graph of new orders.

 

 

 

ISM NON-MANUFACTURING SURVEY RESULTS AT A GLANCE MAY 2010
Index Series
Index
May
Series
Index
Apr.
%
Point
Change
Direction Rate
of
Change
Trend
(Months)
NMI/PMI 55.4 55.4 0.0 Growing Same 5
Business Activity/Production 61.1 60.3 +0.8 Growing Faster 6
New Orders 57.1 58.2 -1.1 Growing Slower 9
Employment 50.4 49.5 +0.9 Growing From Contracting 1
Supplier Deliveries 53.0 53.5 -0.5 Slowing Slower 2
Inventories 62.5 54.5 +8.0 Growing Faster 2
Prices 60.6 64.7 -4.1 Increasing Slower 10
Backlog of Orders 56.0 49.5 +6.5 Growing From Contracting 1
New Export Orders 53.5 57.0 -3.5 Growing Slower 3
Imports 56.5 56.5 0.0 Growing Same 3
Inventory Sentiment 60.5 53.5 +7.0 Too High Faster 156

 

The Prices Index decreased 4.1 percentage points to 60.6 percent in May, indicating that prices are still increasing but at a slower rate than in April.

The price index is what businesses must pay for raw materials, so increases cut into their profits and a decline is a little good news.

Here the ISM list of businesses that are hiring...and not:

The industries reporting an increase in employment in May — listed in order — are: Arts, Entertainment & Recreation; Agriculture, Forestry, Fishing & Hunting; Mining; Retail Trade; Wholesale Trade; Information; Other Services; Finance & Insurance; Professional, Scientific & Technical Services; and Accommodation & Food Services. The industries reporting a reduction in employment in May are: Educational Services; Transportation & Warehousing; Health Care & Social Assistance; and Public Administration.

It seems the non-manufacturing sector is somewhat stalling in it's growth rate. It is still growing, but at the same levels, which isn't enough to really ramp up the economic growth needed to tackle the never ending unemployment problem. Also a second monthly decline of new orders is not a good sign. The good news is finally, finally the unemployment index went positive.

The ISM says 73% of respondents do not separate out export orders from all orders, so take that index with a grain of salt for implications of the trade deficit.

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