Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

America's Factory Pulse Softens As Hiring Turns Negative - Why The Fed And The World Care


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) The headline is simple: U.S. industry cooled in September and companies shed private-sector jobs. The subtext is bigger: if the world's largest economy is losing a little steam, global borrowing costs, currencies, and commodity prices can all shift.

Manufacturing first. The ISM index slipped to 49.1 in September, below the 50 line that separates expansion from contraction. New orders softened to 48.9, a sign demand is not quite there yet.

Prices paid eased to 61.9 from 63.7-still high, but moving in the right direction. Employment improved versus August but stayed in contraction at 45.3, suggesting factories are cautious about staffing.

A separate S&P Global PMI held at 52.0, a reminder that the picture isn't collapsing-it's mixed-but momentum is fading. Jobs next. ADP counted a 32,000 drop in private payrolls when markets expected a gain.

Pair that with an ISM employment reading below 50 and you get a clear message: hiring is getting harder to sustain. For households and retailers, that cools confidence; for the Federal Reserve, it argues against further tightening and keeps rate cuts on the table if weakness persists.



Housing shows the pinch point. The average 30-year mortgage rate rose to 6.46% and applications fell 12.7% week on week. Purchases and refinancing both declined-classic affordability squeeze.

Energy tells its own tale. U.S. crude stockpiles rose by 1.79 million barrels and gasoline inventories jumped 4.13 million as refinery utilization fell 1.6 percentage points.
Soft U.S. Data Weigh on Markets and Crude
A small draw at Cushing only partly offsets the builds. Without a supportive signal from the ongoing OPEC meeting, that's a near-term headwind for gasoline cracks and a mild weight on crude.

The story behind the story is liquidity and linkage. With China and Hong Kong shut for National Day, Asia's trading desks were thin, but the consequences aren't: softer U.S. data typically pushes Treasury yields lower, weakens the dollar at the margin, and eases financial conditions worldwide.

For Brazil and other emerging markets, that can mean breathing room on currencies and debt costs, even as exporters watch U.S. demand cool.

Investors are likely to favor quality, cash-generative stocks and investment-grade credit over early-cycle plays until orders-and hiring-firm up again. Fed remarks later today will test that thesis.

MENAFN01102025007421016031ID1110138948



Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.