According to American Chemistry Council (ACC) Weekly Chemistry & Economic Trends report on January 6, 2023, growth in nonfarm payrolls decelerated in December but continued to expand into the end of the year with a higher-than-expected gain of 223,000. Employment in temporary help services, a good leading indicator of employment trends, continued to contract. Wage growth slowed to 4.6% Y/Y for all employees and 5.0% Y/Y for production workers. Average weekly hours also fell back, another sign that labor demand is cooling. The unemployment rate fell back to its 50-year low of 3.5% as new entrants into the labor force were quickly absorbed into the ranks of the employed and the number of unemployed people also fell.
The number of new jobless claims was down by 19,000 to 204,000 during the week ending 31 December. Continued claims were down (by 24,000) to 1.69 million for the week ending 24 December and the insured unemployment rate was 1.2%, unchanged from the previous week's revised rate.
The labor market remained tight heading into the end of the year. Job openings eased only slightly in November from October’s upwardly revised level. The deficit of available workers (labor force) to fill the number jobs available in the economy (employment + job openings) remained at an historically high 4.4 million. There remain 1.7 job openings to every unemployed person looking for work (compared to an average of 0.6 openings between 2001-19).
The U.S. trade deficit decreased in November by 21.0% to $61.5 billion as imports fell 6.4% and exports fell 2.0%. Imports of goods were down notably in many categories including consumer goods (pharma, cell phones and other household goods), industrial supplies and materials (crude oil), autos and parts, and capital goods (computers and telecoms equipment). U.S. goods exports are down as the high dollar and economic deterioration abroad weaken demand. Exports were down in industrial supplies and materials (natural gas, nonmonetary gold, crude oil), capital goods, and consumer goods (pharma).
The ISM Services PMI fell by 6.9 points in December to 49.6%. The reading below 50 suggests that the services sector contracted for the first time since the pandemic lockdowns. While business activity/production continued to expand, there were contractions in new orders, inventories, new export orders, and employment. Inventory sentiment shifted from “too low” to “too high” suggesting some involuntary inventory accumulation in some parts of the supply chain.
New home sales unexpectedly rose in November, up by 5.8%, but the gain comes after downwardly revised estimates for the previous several months. Inventories continued to edge lower and represent an 8.6-month supply, lower than the previous two months, but up from 6.2 months in November 2021. Sales were off 15.3% compared to a year ago. The median sales price was up 9.5% from last November but edged down compared to October 2022.
Light vehicle sales eased to a 13.3 million seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR) in December, down from 14.2 million SAAR in November and 15.2 in October. The rising cost of borrowing may be tempering demand for vehicles. With December’s data in hand, vehicle sales for the year came in at 13.8 million, the lowest level since 2009.
Construction spending rose 0.2% in November and was up 85% Y/Y. A 0.9% gain in nonresidential construction offset a 0.5% drop in residential. Spending on multi-family home construction rose 2.4% while spending on single family home construction fell 2.9%. Higher non-residential spending was led by a 6.4% gain in manufacturing which was up 42.9% Y/Y. Public spending on construction fell by 0.1% but was 10.4% higher Y/Y.
Factory orders fell by a larger-than-expected 1.8% in November following gains the previous three months. The decline was led by a steep fall in aircraft orders which are characteristically volatile. Beyond aircraft, orders for several other categories of durable goods were also lower. Nondurable orders were 1.4% lower. Core business orders edged higher by 0.1%, reflecting higher orders in some categories of machinery, metals, and electronics. The pipeline of unfilled orders was flat, following more than two years of expansion. Manufacturing shipments were down 0.6% and inventory growth was flat. The ratio of inventories-to-shipments ticked higher from 1.46 in October to 1.47 in November. This was still below the ratio of 1.50 last November. It seems clear that the momentum in manufacturing has played out and the sector was declining at the end of the year.
The ISM Manufacturing PMI® reading was under the 50-mark for the second month in a row. The PMI fell 0.6 points to 48.4% in December. This two-month period of contraction was preceded by 29 months of expansion in the U.S. industrial sector. Domestic and external demand has been weakening and at a faster pace. Output dropped into contraction in December while employment pulled above the 50-mark to signal growth. Inventories expanded at a faster rate. Inflationary pressures ease. Supply chain pressures are easing as well with faster supplier deliveries being reported. Just two manufacturing industries reported growth in December while 13 industries were contracting.
The JP Morgan Global Manufacturing PMI™ reading was 0.2 points lower at 48.6% in December. It was the fourth month in a row with a reading below 50, indicating sustained deterioration through the latter part of the year. Output continued to decline in December but at a slower rate. Looking at the sector breakdown, the drag is in intermediate goods. Output in consumer and investment goods rose. Demand is weakening. New goods orders were down across all three sectors, however. New export orders declined, as well. Manufacturing jobs decreased for the second month in a row. Twenty-two of 29 countries with data had PMI readings indicating contraction in their manufacturing sector.