US manufacturing grew in August
US factory activity continued to expand in August but manufacturers struggled with ongoing supply chain snarls while employment contracted again, according to an industry survey released Wednesday.
Defying expectations for a modest decline, the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) reported its manufacturing index rose slightly from July to 59.9% last month, extending the sector's recovery from last year's downturn caused by the pandemic.
However, "companies and suppliers continue to struggle at unprecedented levels to meet increasing demand," ISM manufacturing survey chair Timothy Fiore said.
"All segments of the manufacturing economy are impacted by record-long raw-materials lead times, continued shortages of critical basic materials, rising commodities prices and difficulties in transporting products," he said in a statement.
The impact of the supply chain snarls was seen in the data, with the order backlog index rising about three percentage points to 68.2%.
Otherwise, the report was generally positive, with new orders climbing about two points to 66.7%, production gaining a similar amount to 60% and inventories crossing the 50-percent threshold indicating expansion with a 54.2% reading in August.
The data also showed supplier deliveries were speeding up, an indication that an end to the backlogs and delays may be coming.
"Business is strong. Part shortages are our largest business constraint. We cannot fulfill orders to customers in reasonable lead times," an electrical equipment, appliances and components firm told the survey.- Nampa/AFP
Defying expectations for a modest decline, the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) reported its manufacturing index rose slightly from July to 59.9% last month, extending the sector's recovery from last year's downturn caused by the pandemic.
However, "companies and suppliers continue to struggle at unprecedented levels to meet increasing demand," ISM manufacturing survey chair Timothy Fiore said.
"All segments of the manufacturing economy are impacted by record-long raw-materials lead times, continued shortages of critical basic materials, rising commodities prices and difficulties in transporting products," he said in a statement.
The impact of the supply chain snarls was seen in the data, with the order backlog index rising about three percentage points to 68.2%.
Otherwise, the report was generally positive, with new orders climbing about two points to 66.7%, production gaining a similar amount to 60% and inventories crossing the 50-percent threshold indicating expansion with a 54.2% reading in August.
The data also showed supplier deliveries were speeding up, an indication that an end to the backlogs and delays may be coming.
"Business is strong. Part shortages are our largest business constraint. We cannot fulfill orders to customers in reasonable lead times," an electrical equipment, appliances and components firm told the survey.- Nampa/AFP
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