Electrical Marketing’s Leading Indicators, June 18, 2010

June 18, 2010
PMI Index drops below 60 points. While still comfortably above the 50-point mark indicating a growth environment, the Purchasing Managers Index published monthly by the Institute for Supply Management (ISM), Tempe, Ariz., dropped less than a point to 59.7 points in May

PMI Index drops below 60 points. While still comfortably above the 50-point mark indicating a growth environment, the Purchasing Managers Index published monthly by the Institute for Supply Management (ISM), Tempe, Ariz., dropped less than a point to 59.7 points in May.

“The manufacturing sector grew for the 10th consecutive month during May,” said Norbert Ore, chair of ISM’s Manufacturing Business Survey Committee. “The rate of growth as indicated by the PMI is driven by continued strength in new orders and production. Employment continues to grow as manufacturers have added to payrolls for six consecutive months.”

Help wanted advertising levels off. Online advertised vacancies were unchanged in May at 4,149,000, following a 223,000 gain in April, according to the Conference Board. “After the large 223,000 April increase in online advertised vacancies that kicked off the spring hiring season, employers essentially held steady in May,” said June Shelp, V.P. at the Conference Board. “As the economy comes out of the recession, online demand has risen in a wide variety of occupations. Occupations commonly associated with office work (administrative, legal and computer jobs) as well as manufacturing and construction vacancies are improving but remain below their pre-recession levels, while online demand for workers in sales, education and training, entertainment, food preparation and service, health-care support and personal care are all at or above their pre-recession 2007 levels.”

Builder confidence declines in June. Snapping a string of two consecutive monthly gains, builder confidence in the market for newly built, single-family homes fell back to February levels, before the beginning of the home buyer tax credit-related surge, according to results of the latest National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI). The HMI dropped five points to 17 in June. “The home buyer tax credit did its job in stoking spring sales and we expected a temporary pull back in the builders’ outlook after the credit expired at the end of April,” said NAHB Chairman Bob Jones, a home builder from Bloomfield Hills, Mich.