US business activity stable in March; inflation picks up

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. business activity held steady in March, but prices increased across the board, suggesting that inflation could remain elevated after picking up at the start of the year.

S&P Global said on Thursday that its flash U.S. Composite PMI Output Index, which tracks the manufacturing and services sectors, dipped to 52.2 this month from 52.5 in February. A reading above 50 indicates expansion in the private sector.

The modest slowdown reflected a further cooling in services sector activity. Manufacturing climbed to a 21-month high. The survey suggested that the economy ended the first quarter on solid ground, though the pace of growth probably slowed from the October-December quarter’s 3.2% annualized rate.

The United States continues to outperform its global peers, despite 525 basis points worth of interest rate hikes from the Federal Reserve since March 2022 to quell inflation.

The U.S. central bank on Wednesday left its policy rate unchanged at the current 5.25%-5.50% range, but policymakers indicated they still expected to reduce it by three-quarters of a percentage point by the end of this year.

The S&P Global survey’s measure of new orders received by private businesses slipped to 52.1 from 52.3 in February. Its measure of prices paid for inputs increased to a six-month high of 58.9 from 55.5 in February. The output prices gauge rose to 56.8, the highest reading since April 2023, from 54.1 in February. Much of the price increases were in services.

With goods disinflation likely drawing to an end, the increase in services prices will need to slow considerably to keep overall inflation on a downward trajectory.

This month’s increase in both input and output prices hinted at further rises in inflation in the coming months. Consumer prices have risen strongly in the first two months of 2024.

“Costs have increased on the back of further wage growth and rising fuel prices, pushing overall selling price inflation for goods and services up to its highest for nearly a year,” said Chris Williamson, chief business economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence. “The steep jump in prices from the recent low seen in January hints at unwelcome upward pressure on consumer prices in the coming months.”

Manufacturing expanded further, with the survey’s flash manufacturing PMI edging up to 52.5 this month, the highest reading since June 2022, from 52.2 in February.

Growth in new orders slowed, but employment increased and

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Business insolvencies jump despite stable economic growth

Daily roundup of research and analysis from The Globe and Mail’s market strategist Scott Barlow

It’s not easy to find signs of aggregate consumer financial stress in Canada but as BMO senior economist Sal Guatieri points out, there has been a concerning jump in business insolvencies.

“The May data on Canadian insolvencies show growing stress for both consumers and businesses, especially the latter. Consumer insolvencies have largely returned to pre-pandemic norms, and are likely to rise further if interest rates stay high and the jobless rate rises. Of greater concern is that business insolvencies have already overshot 2019 levels at a time of reasonably healthy economic activity. … Businesses showed amazing resiliency during the Great Recession. But they are already under stress even before an expected mild economic slump”

“BMO: “Canadian Businesses Under Pressure”” – (research excerpt) Twitter

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Citi analyst Ephrem Ravi maintains his bullish stance on battery-related commodity prices.

“In order to enable the Energy Transition and meet related customer and government demands, automakers are set to consume dramatically more industrial and battery metals over the coming years … We estimate that the value of automaker industrial and battery metal consumption outside of China may rise by $140bn to $230bn between 2023 and 2030 (+15% p.a), from ~$90bn at present, using spot prices. The bulk of the increase may come from lithium (+$87bn), alongside nickel (+$19bn), copper (+$14bn), and aluminium (+$14bn), assuming broadly unchanged prices from recent levels … We estimate that the value of desired metals hedging from automakers outside of China might quadruple from ~$23bn at present, to ~$80bn by 2030″

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Also from BMO, analyst Sohrab Movahedi calculates that the major banks will be making less profits from basic lending operations.

“The Q2/23 results at the Canadian Banking Segment (making up nearly half of the “Big 6′s” total earnings) marked the first quarter of negative earnings growth since Q4/20, with group earnings down 4% y/y. The 4% y/y decline in earnings is reflective of double-digit revenue growth (NIM [net interest margin] expansion and resilient loan growth) that was more than offset by higher expenses and normalizing PCLs [provisions for credit losses]. The segment’s profitability, as represented by the group’s ROA [return on assets], was down y/y from 128bps to 114 bps (in line with the pre-pandemic average of 114bps), primarily reflecting the negative impact from higher PCLs. Looking ahead, the combination of a slowdown in

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