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US Manufacturing Activity Scales 4-yr High in May, ISM says

WASHINGTON, June 1 (Reuters) - U.S. manufacturing activity increased more than expected in May, hitting the highest level in four years, likely driven by businesses front-loading orders amid rising prices and shortages because of ​the war with Iran.

The Institute for Supply Management said on Monday its manufacturing ‌PMI advanced to 54.0 last month, the highest reading since May 2022, from 52.7 in April. A reading above 50 indicates expansion in manufacturing, which accounts for 9.4% of the economy. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast ​the PMI rising to 53.

Manufacturing has now grown for five straight months, anchored mostly by ​an artificial intelligence spending spree.

The U.S.-Israeli war with Iran has closed the Strait ⁠of Hormuz, severely disrupting the shipping of commodities and raising prices of goods like energy, ​aluminum and fertilizers.

The ISM survey's new orders measure increased to 56.8 last month from 54.1 in April. ​There were rises in backlog orders as well as exports.

Its supplier deliveries index was unchanged at a high reading of 60.6. A reading above 50 indicates slower deliveries. Supply chains were already strained by last year's sweeping tariffs ​on imports, which were struck down in February by the U.S. Supreme Court. President Donald Trump's administration ​has imposed new duties and defended the tariffs as necessary to revive the domestic industrial base.

With the delivery performance ‌poor, ⁠prices at the factory gate continued to rise, though the pace slowed slightly last month. The survey's prices paid for inputs measure edged down to a still-high 82.1 from 84.6 in April, which was the highest reading since April 2022, and was lower than forecasts for 85.0. The conflict is driving ​up prices, and inflation ​is spilling over ⁠beyond energy goods.

Inflation increased at its fastest pace in three years in April, the government reported last week. Soaring inflation, which is eroding household purchasing ​power, has left financial markets expecting that the Federal Reserve would keep ​its benchmark ⁠overnight interest rate in the 3.50%-3.75% range into next year.

Despite the increase in orders, factory employment remained subdued last month. The ISM's manufacturing employment index posted its 32nd straight month of contraction after ⁠expanding in ​September 2023. The ISM has noted that managing head ​counts remains the norm in the sector as opposed to hiring, mostly through layoffs, attrition and not backfilling positions.

Manufacturing employment ​has declined by about 77,000 jobs since January 2025.

Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama

Source: Reuters


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