Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics
Europe
| Aug 23 2023

Flash PMIs Mostly Weaken in August

The S&P Global flash PMI for August shows broad weakening with a couple of warmer spots as France and Japan showed stronger composite PMIs month-to-month. However, decaying on the month were the composite PMIs from the European Monetary Union, from Germany, from the United Kingdom, and from the United States. Only Japan showed strengthening across the board with improvement in manufacturing, services, and, of course, the composite. France showed resilience in the composite supported by manufacturing. Both Germany and the European Monetary Union showed month-to-month improvements in manufacturing, but they were not strong enough gains to translate to the composite index in the face of service sector weakness.

In August, only the U.K. and the U.S. show weakening in manufacturing, services, and the composite. The U.K. also shows triple weakening on those metrics in July as well. The U.S. does not follow that pattern because in July there was an improvement in manufacturing; however, in June the U.S. showed weakening in all three measures.

The overriding theme for the month, despite some mixed signals in month-to-month changes, is that the queue percentile standings are broadly and severely weak with the single exception of Japan where the services sector has a 92.5 percentile standing and the composite has an 88.7 percentile standing. Japan still has a subpar manufacturing sector with a 47.2 percentile standing. All the rest of the metrics in the table have queue percentile standings below the 50th percentile, meaning they're below their medians on data since January 2019, and for the most part, very substantially below their medians. For every reporting unit in the table, the standings for manufacturing are weaker than for services; the partial exception to that is France where the percentile standings for manufacturing and services are identical at a pathetically weak 9.4 percentile standing.

Compared to the responses in July, August does reflect some scattered improvements and August is also improved relative to the June period. In June there were only two sectors that were stronger; they were for manufacturing in the U.K. and in France.

Over three months there are net declines for all the countries and all the diffusion readings but the one exception being manufacturing in France which is up by 0.3 diffusion points over three months.

Assessing the PMI standings from January 2020 before COVID struck, all the sector readings for all the countries are weaker on balance except Japan. The composite in Japan is higher by 2.5 points, manufacturing is better by 0.9 points and services are better by 3.3 points over that period. But that is the exception. The U.S. composite is lower by 2.8 points, the European Monetary Union composite is lowered by 3.9 points, the U.K. composite is lower by 4.5 points, the French composite is lower by 5.0 points, and the German composite is lower by 6.4 points. After three and two-thirds years, most of the sectors were reporting weaker conditions than those that prevailed before COVID struck. It gives you some idea of the impact of COVID on the global economy. It created a short sharp recession in a lot of countries, but it has more broadly created a legacy of lethargy; the countries have had a very difficult time breaking out from it. The average percentile standing in manufacturing in August is a 9.7 percentile standing with services at a 29.9 percentile standing and the composite and a 22.6 percentile standing. Conditions are not only weaker than they were in January 2020, but compared to where they've been since 2019, they rank as extremely weak.

  • Robert A. Brusca is Chief Economist of Fact and Opinion Economics, a consulting firm he founded in Manhattan. He has been an economist on Wall Street for over 25 years. He has visited central banking and large institutional clients in over 30 countries in his career as an economist. Mr. Brusca was a Divisional Research Chief at the Federal Reserve Bank of NY (Chief of the International Financial markets Division), a Fed Watcher at Irving Trust and Chief Economist at Nikko Securities International. He is widely quoted and appears in various media.   Mr. Brusca holds an MA and Ph.D. in economics from Michigan State University and a BA in Economics from the University of Michigan. His research pursues his strong interests in non aligned policy economics as well as international economics. FAO Economics’ research targets investors to assist them in making better investment decisions in stocks, bonds and in a variety of international assets. The company does not manage money and has no conflicts in giving economic advice.

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