| Consensus | Consensus Range | Actual | Previous | Revised | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Index | 97 | 97 to 98 | 98 | 97 | 101 |
Highlights
After improving to minus 15 in October, the reading for overall order books fell to minus 20 in November and is back below its long-term average of minus 18. Businesses were also more negative on their foreign orders as seen by the component falling to minus 15 from minus 4 in October.
It's worth noting that much of the contraction was due to a fallback in other transportation equipment which can be volatile. This fell to 103 in November from 117 the previous month, pulling the overall transportation sector reading to 100 from 110.
Also lower was the reading for machinery and equipment which slipped to 104 in November from 106 the previous month, with electrical equipment the main drag. This fell to 99 from 107.
Companies reported marginally higher supply and demand constraints even though there was some easing of sourcing difficulties and workforce shortages, although this is too little to contribute to a turnaround.
The manufacturing sector continues to face challenges with weak order books underscoring the problem. Geopolitical uncertainty along with continued domestic challenges are not giving businesses an impetus to expand their production.