US Manufacturing, Construction Spending Shrink UnexpectedlyPublished: Tuesday, 4 Sep 2012 | 10:09 AM ET Text Size
By: Reuters
http://www.cnbc.com/id/48894306U.S. manufacturing shrank at its sharpest clip in more than three years in August while U.S. construction spending in July fell by the most in a year, new reports showed on Tuesday.
The Institute for Supply Management said its index of national factory activity fell to 49.6 in August from 49.8 in July.
The reading fell shy of the 50.0 median estimate in a Reuters poll of economists. A reading below 50 indicates contraction in the sector.
The index's employment component fell to 51.6, the lowest since November 2009, from 52.0 in July.
New orders, a forward-looking sub-index, fell to 47.1 in August, the worst showing since April of 2009. It stood at 48 in July.
The exports index ticked up to 47 last month from 46.5 in July but remained in contraction territory as recession in parts of Europe and slower growth in Asia sapped demand for U.S. goods.
Construction Spending Drops OffU.S. construction spending in July fell by the most in a year as both the private and public sectors cut back on investment, according to a report that could dampen hopes of a pick-up in economic activity in the third quarter.
Construction spending dropped 0.9 percent to an annual rate of $834.4 billion, the lowest level since April, the Commerce Department said on Tuesday. The decline was the first since March and followed an unrevised 0.4 percent rise in June.
Economists polled by Reuters had expected construction spending to rise 0.4 percent in July.
The report could put a damper on optimism that the economy fared slightly better early this quarter after growth slowed to a 1.7 percent annual pace in the April-June period.
Data on job growth, housing and consumer spending has been fairly upbeat, but economic activity remains constrained by fears of higher taxes and sharp cuts in government spending in January and the ongoing debt crisis in Europe, which are eroding confidence.
Construction spending fell across the board in July, with steep declines in private outlays. Private construction dropped 1.2 percent, also the largest decline since July last year.
Private nonresidential construction spending slipped 0.9 percent, while outlays on residential projects dropped 1.6 percent.
Spending on public sector construction dipped 0.4 percent. Outlays on federal government projects fell 1.3 percent, dropping for a second straight month.
Spending on state and local government projects slipped 0.3 percent, breaking three straight months of gains.