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Mid-America Index Improves, but Confidence Plummets



The Creighton University Mid-America Business Conditions Index, a leading economic indicator for the nine-state region stretching from Minnesota to Arkansas, rose for only the second time in the last seven months, and remained above growth neutral for the 29th straight month.

Overall Index: The Business Conditions Index, which uses the identical methodology as the national Institute for Supply Management (ISM) and ranges between 0 and 100 with 50.0 representing growth neutral, climbed to 53.1 from 52.7 in September.

The Mid-America report is produced independently from the national ISM.

As stated by one supply manager, "Manufacturing is slow for this time of year. After holidays, expect major corrections."

"Creighton's monthly survey results indicate the region continues to add manufacturing activity, but at a slow pace with declining inflationary pressures. Supply chain disruptions eased further in October, according to supply managers," said Ernie Goss, PhD, director of Creighton University's Economic Forecasting Group and the Jack A. MacAllister Chair in Regional Economics in the Heider College of Business.

Employment: Despite healthy growth in monthly economic activity for almost two years, manufacturers in the region have added jobs at only a modest pace. The October employment index fell to 46.3 from 51.9 in September. More than one of four, or 25.9%, of supply managers indicated that the shortage of labor was the greatest challenge facing their firm for the next 12 months.

According to U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data, monthly job gains for the region fell from 0.28% in the fiscal second quarter to 0.09% in the third quarter.

One supply manager reported that, "The lack of committed, passionate workers is a challenge."

Other October comments from supply managers were:

"Inflation is a tax."

"We are just on the front end of a pending recession regardless of who comes out ahead in the general (mid-term) elections."

Wholesale Prices: The wholesale inflation gauge for the month softened to its lowest reading since August 2020. The inflation reading fell to 65.4 for October from 71.2 in September. "As global commodity prices have stabilized at lower levels, so has inflation. Even so, I expect the Federal Reserve to announce an interest rate hike of 75 basis points (0.75%) to combat inflation at its meeting today with another 50-basis point increase in December," said Goss.

On average, supply managers expect prices for their firm's inputs and supplies to rise by only 2.5% in the next six months. This is down significantly from the forecast just six months ago. One supply manager reported that, "(I expect) purchased prices of commodities to correct down substantially."

Supply chain managers were asked to identify the greatest fourth-quarter challenge in 2022. Approximately one-third named supply chain disruptions as the greatest challenge. This is down from 58.6% recorded two months earlier.

Confidence: Looking ahead six months, economic optimism as captured by the October Business Confidence Index slumped to a very weak 18.5 from 25.9 in September. "Business Confidence Index fell to lowest level since March 2020, the first month of the pandemic," said Goss.

"Confidence indices for each month in 2022, all below growth neutral, are the worst string of readings since the 2008-09 recession," said Goss.

Inventories: The regional inventory index, reflecting levels of raw materials and supplies, dropped to 57.8 from September's 65.5. "Manufacturing firms continue to stockpile inventories to avoid supply chain disruptions," said Goss.

Trade: Despite supply chain bottlenecks and a very strong dollar, the export index rose to 52.9 from 44.5 in September and 43.8 in August. On the other hand, firms cut back on their imports with an import index of 35.0, down significantly from 50.1 in September.

Other survey components of the October Business Conditions Index: new orders jumped to 55.8 from 46.2 in September; the production or sales index climbed to 57.4 from 46.2 in September; and the speed of deliveries of raw materials and supplies declined to 48.1 from September's 53.9. This lower reading indicates a reduction in supply chain disruptions and fewer delays for the month. October's reading was the lowest recorded since January 2018.

The Creighton Economic Forecasting Group has conducted the monthly survey of supply managers in nine states since 1994 to produce leading economic indicators of the Mid-America economy. States included in the survey are Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma and South Dakota.

For a second straight month, Missouri's Business Conditions Index climbed above growth neutral to 54.9 from 50.4 in September. Components of the overall index from the survey of supply managers for October were: new orders at 52.3, production or sales at 59.5, delivery lead time at 49.4, inventories at 61.4 and employment at 51.8. The latest U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data indicate that monthly manufacturing job growth deteriorated from 0.26% for Q2 to 0.05% for Q3.

 

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