The US economy is going through its worst growth spell for three and a half years, according to flash PMI survey data from Markit. The headline index from the two PMI national surveys covering manufacturing and services had fallen to the stagnation-level of 50.0 in February and rose only modestly in March to 51.1. That was the third-lowest reading seen since the global financial crisis.
Collectively, the surveys point to the weakest quarterly expansion of the economy since the third quarter of 2012. The PMI surveys suggest the economy grew at a meagre 0.7% annualised rate in the first quarter, down from 1.0% in the fourth quarter of last year.
US ‘economic growth v Markit PMI
Output indices in both manufacturing and services remained near post-crisis lows in March, failing to revive from recent lows seen in February.
US manufacturing output v Markit PMI
US services GDP v Markit PMI
* GDP in the top two charts above is smoothed and converted into a monthly series by taking the mean of the current month and the preceding and following three month values.
The lack a strong rebound in March is a big disappointment, as bad weather had been blamed by companies for part of the weakness in the first two months of the year.
Worse may be to come. The greatest concern is the near-stalling of new business growth. The survey’s indices of new order inflows indicate that demand for goods and services is growing at the slowest rate seen this side of the global financial crisis.
It’s not surprising therefore that firms lack pricing power, as reflected in a near-stagnation of average selling prices in recent months.
US inflation
One positive is that the rate of hiring remained impressively resilient, signalling another month of 200,000 non-farm payroll growth in March. However, such strong hiring at a time of weak output growth suggests productivity is deteriorating at the fastest rate seen over the past six years.
US non-farm payrolls
Disclaimer: The intellectual property rights to these data provided herein are owned by or licensed to Markit Economics Limited. Any unauthorised use, including but not limited to copying, distributing, transmitting or otherwise of any data appearing is not permitted without Markit’s prior consent. Markit shall not have any liability, duty or obligation for or relating to the content or information (“data”) contained herein, any errors, inaccuracies, omissions or delays in the data, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon.
In no event shall Markit be liable for any special, incidental, or consequential damages, arising out of the use of the data. Purchasing Managers' Index™ and PMI™ are either registered trademarks of Markit Economics Limited or licensed to Markit Economics Limited. Markit is a registered trade mark of Markit Group Limited.