Monday, May 2, 2011

U.S. Manufacturing Growth Slows Amid Price Pressures

Growth in new orders, production, employment and supplier deliveries slowed.
By . Agence France-Presse
May 2, 2011

The manufacturing sector expanded in April for the 21st month running but the pace slowed as companies faced higher prices for material inputs, according to report released on May 2 by The Institute for Supply Management.
The group's manufacturing index, based on a survey of purchasing managers, stood at 60.4% in April, down from 61.2% in March.
It was the fourth consecutive month of growth above 6% on the purchasing managers index for manufacturing, the sector driving the US economic recovery from the worst recession in decades.
Growth in new orders, production, employment and supplier deliveries slowed.
"While the manufacturing sector is definitely performing above most expectations so far in 2011, manufacturers are experiencing significant cost pressures from commodities and other inputs," said Norbert Ore, head of the ISM's manufacturing committee.
Prices on the PMI jumped to 85.5% in April from 85% in March. That was the highest price reading since July 2008, when the index registered 88.5% as crude oil prices hit a record $147 a barrel.
"This ISM manufacturing index is fitting into the classic pattern of a firming economic recovery," said John Ryding at RDQ Economics.
Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2011

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