ConsensusConsensus RangeActualPrevious
Index51.551.5 to 51.552.250.7

Highlights

S&P's manufacturing sample is reporting the best activity since July 2022. The PMI ended February at 52.2, up 7 tenths from the mid-month flash and up 1.5 points from January's 50.7 which was the first 50-plus showing since April. These results hint at a better-than-expected headline for the ISM manufacturing index at the top of the hour where Econoday's consensus is calling for no more than limited improvement to 49.5.

Details are led by the best pace for new orders since May 2022; output and job creation also rose and the sample is now building inventory. Cost pressures are another positive, easing on greater availability of raw materials and improvement in supplier performance. And a positive for the sample if not for Federal Reserve policy is the steepest pace of price hikes in nearly a year, which is further confirmation of the month's strength.

Market Consensus Before Announcement

The final manufacturing PMI for February is expected to come in at 51.5, unchanged from the mid-month flash and 1.4 points higher than January.

Definition

Based on monthly questionnaire surveys of selected companies, the Purchasing Managers' Manufacturing Index (PMI) offers an advance indication on month-to-month activity in the private sector economy by tracking changes in variables such as production, new orders, stock levels, employment and prices across manufacturing industries. The final index for the current month is released roughly a week after the flash.

Description

Investors need to keep their fingers on the pulse of the economy because it dictates how various types of investments will perform. By tracking economic data such as the ISM manufacturing index in the U.S. and the Markit PMIs in the U.S. and elsewhere, investors will know what the economic backdrop is for the various markets. The stock market likes to see healthy economic growth because that translates to higher corporate profits. The bond market prefers less rapid growth and is extremely sensitive to whether the economy is growing too quickly and causing potential inflationary pressures.

The Markit PMI manufacturing data give a detailed look at the manufacturing sector, how busy it is and where things are headed. Since the manufacturing sector is a major source of cyclical variability in the economy, this report has a big influence on the markets. And its sub-indexes provide a picture of orders, output, employment and prices.

Markit originally began collecting monthly Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) data in the U.S. in April 2004, initially from a panel of manufacturers in the U.S. electronics goods producing sector. In May 2007, Markit's U.S. PMI research was extended out to cover producers of metal goods. In October 2009, Markit's U.S. Manufacturing PMI survey panel was extended further to cover all areas of U.S. manufacturing activity. Back data for Markit's U.S. Manufacturing PMI between May 2007 and September 2009 are an aggregation of data collected from producers of electronic goods and metal goods producers, while data from October 2009 are based on data collected from a panel representing the entire U.S. manufacturing economy. Markit's total U.S. Manufacturing PMI survey panel comprises over 600 companies.
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