U.S. ISM Manufacturing Index (February 2025)
Andrew Hencic, Senior Economist | 416-944-5307
Date Published: March 3, 2025
- Category:
- U.S.
- Data Commentary
- Commodities & Industry
The ISM Manufacturing Index shows sector expansion lost steam in February
- The ISM Manufacturing Index pulled back to 50.3 in February from 50.9 in January, a smidge behind expectations.
- Ten of 18 industries reported growth for the month – up from eight in January. In further signs on healthy momentum, 24% of manufacturing GDP contracted in February, down from 43% in January, 52% in December and 66% in November.
- However, demand conditions deteriorated. The new orders index flipped back into contraction (48.6), while new export orders growth decelerated (51.4 vs 52.4 in January). The backlog of orders shrank at a slower pace than in January (46.8 vs. 44.9) in a month where production growth slowed.
- The production index took a step back, falling to 50.7 from 52.5, suggesting production growth slowed. Employment also softened after last month's gain, falling back into contraction territory (47.6).
- Price gains accelerated sharply last month (62.4 vs. 54.9 in January), registering their strongest month of increases since June 2022.
Key Implications
- A bit of a mixed bag from the manufacturing sector, with some warning signs mixed in. Momentum is carrying the day, with production continuing to grow and a smaller share of the sector reporting a contraction. However, underlying conditions are showing some cracks with new orders pulling back after a strong January, and tariffs already being cited as a driver of rising prices.
- Much like last month, with tariffs looming the ISM manufacturing survey could end up being more informative of what was, rather than what will be. The deadline for broad tariffs on Canada and Mexico is tomorrow, with an additional 10% levy on China (beyond that from last month) also expected. For the manufacturing sector, new tariffs on the integrated North American market could have far-reaching effects, limiting what can be inferred from last month's figures.
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