The ISM Services Index, Measuring 75% Of The Economy

Recently I have paid much more attention to the ISM services index. That’s because, since the turn of the Millennium, manufacturing’s share of the economy has contracted to the point where even a significant decline in that index has not translated into an economy-wide recession, as for example in 2015-16. 

When we use an economically weighted average of the non-manufacturing index (75%) with the manufacturing index (25%), it has been a much more reliable signal, particularly when we use the 3 month average, requiring it to be below 50. 

Once again this month the contraction shown in the manufacturing index has been more than counterbalanced by continued expansion in the services index, which was reported at 54.9. The more leading new orders subindex (not shown in the graph below) came in stronger, at 59.4:

(Click on image to enlarge)

Here are the last six months, including September, of both the manufacturing (left column) and non-manufacturing index (center column) numbers, and their monthly weighted average (right) :

APR 49.2  49.4.  49.3 

MAY 48.9. 53.8. 52.5

JUN 48.5. 48.8. 48.7

JUL. 46.8. 51.4. 50.2

AUG. 47.2. 51.5  50.4

SEP. 47.2. 54.9  53.0

And here is the same data for the new orders components:

APR 49.1. 52.2. 51.4

MAY 45.4. 54.1. 51.9

JUN. 49.3  47.3. 47.8 

JUL.  47.4. 52.4. 51.2

AUG. 44.6. 53.0. 50.9 

SEP.  46.1. 59.4. 56.1 

While the single month average for both the headline and new orders components showed contraction in June, but it did not trigger a signal based on the three month average. Last month the three month weighted average of the headline numbers was 49.7, and the new orders component 49.97, which rounded to 50.0.

With this month’s data, the three month headline average for manufacturing is 47.1, and for non-manufacturing is 52.6. That makes the economically weighted headline average 51.2. For new orders the weighted three month average is 52.7.

Essentially, with the poor June readings for the new orders subindex in particular out of the average, the economically weighted ISM indicator has returned to a moderately positive aggregate reading. This is good news.

Tomorrow I will be looking to see what happens with manufacturing and construction jobs in particular, and whether new entrants to the labor force continue to distort the unemployment rate higher. We’ll see then.


More By This Author:

Jobless Claims: Not So Good As The Headline, But Not So Bad Either
Are Manufacturing And Construction In A Synchronous Downturn? If So, That’s Trouble
JOLTS Report For August

Disclaimer: This blog contains opinions and observations. It is not professional advice in any way, shape or form and should not be construed that way. In other words, buyer beware.

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