- Who Were the Biggest Winners And Losers This Year?
- GE, Comcast Complete Deal Over NBC Universal: Source
- US May Raise Rates Before Jobs Recover: Fed's Plosser
- Cramer: Watch Tech Stocks Wednesday
- Stocks Likely Don't Need Santa to Keep Rally Going
- Larry Kudlow's Open Letter to Tiger Woods
- Super Fantasy Christmas Gifts of 2009
- AIG Slashes US Debt Under Deal With New York Fed
- Seamstress Fined $5.7 Million for Insider Trading
- 8 Stocks to Gain on Obama's Afghan Plan: Analysts
- BofA On Proposed Changes In The Housing Bailout Program
- The Future of The Media Landscape
- November Auto Sales Muddle Along
- Busch: What Obama Won't Say Tonight
- Stick with Equities—Avoid Emerging Markets: Laszlo Birinyi
- Pfizer Chomps On A Carrot
- Predictions 2010: Technology
- Predictions 2010: Consumers
- First hotel opens at CityCenter project in Vegas
- Arizona high court turns away budget challenge
- NC Medicaid dealing with cost-control delays
- Gov't unveils rules to speed up 'short sales'
- Indictment: Poultry plant wouldn't slow wastewater
- BestBuy.com to offer 99-cent standard shipping
- Movers roundup: Bed Bath & Beyond
- Gates Foundation announces grants for libraries
- Movers roundup: OmniVision, Cigna
NEW YORK - Brighter news on manufacturing is offering more hope that the longest recession since World War II is near an end. But with construction and many other segments of the economy still weak and unemployment rising, any rebound likely will be slow.
A key gauge of manufacturing showed Wednesday that industry activity declined less than expected in June. The Institute of Supply Management's manufacturing index posted a 44.8 — the best showing since last August, a month before the financial crisis erupted with force.
Manufacturing sectors overseas also signaled a bit of a rebound, though other U.S. economic news was more mixed. Ford Motor Co. reported the smallest sales decline of the year in June, but sales at struggling Chrysler Group LLC continued to plunge.
Outside of manufacturing, construction spending fell in May for the seventh time in the past eight months. Spending dropped more than expected as strength in nonresidential building was eclipsed by a decline in housing construction and weakness in government projects.
But in a hint of better days to come, the National Association of Realtors said an index of pending home sales edged up 0.1 percent in May. It was the fourth straight advance for the index, which tracks contracts to buy previously owned homes.
"I think the great recession is winding down," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com. "Retailing should firm a bit in the next few months, helped by the stimulus package, and I think lean inventories will trigger production increases."
After a period last winter when the economic news was unrelentingly bad, many analysts said the mixed nature of the new reports showed an economy starting to turn the corner. But they cautioned against expecting anything but a weak recovery.
"This downturn was too big and too global an event to hope that the bottoming process will be quick," said Cliff Waldman, an economist with the Manufacturers Alliances/MAPI, an industry trade group. "I think the economy is going to take two steps forward and one step back."
![]() |
The recession began in December 2007 and intensified last fall after the most severe financial crisis since the 1930s. The overall economy, as measured by the gross domestic product, shrank at an annual rate of 6.3 percent in the October-December quarter and by 5.5 percent in the first three months of this year. That was the steepest six-month decline in a half-century.
Many economists say they think the drop in GDP slowed to about 2 percent in the April-June quarter. More optimistic analysts believe the economy will start growing again in the current July-September period, helped by the government's stimulus spending.
Zandi said the $787 billion stimulus package of increased government spending and tax cuts should translate into a sizable boost to the economy in this quarter, turning what would have been another GDP decline into a small increase of around 1 percent.
But the rebound in GDP won't halt a continued rise in unemployment, which is a lagging economic indicator. Economists predict the unemployment rate climbed to 9.6 percent last month, from a 25-year high of 9.4 percent in May. The June report will be released Thursday.
Zandi expects unemployment to top out at 10.5 percent next spring, close to the 10.8 percent hit in late 1982, the highest jobless rate since World War II.
The 44.8 reading for the ISM manufacturing index in June was up from 42.8 in May and marked the highest point for the index since August. Any reading below 50 is viewed as a signal of contraction in manufacturing.
But economists were heartened by the upward trend in recent months: This is the second straight month that the index has been above 41.2. ISM analysts said this was consistent with an expansion for the overall economy even though manufacturing is still shrinking.
"A slow recovery for manufacturing is forming," said Norbert Ore, chair of the ISM's manufacturing business survey committee.
Other reports were encouraging for manufacturing in other countries. Two reports from China, the world's third-largest economy, showed small gains in surveys of manufacturers. Elsewhere, the purchasing managers index from the 16-nation euro zone showed a slower pace of decline in June. And the equivalent index in Britain hit a 15-month high of 47.
British manufacturing output rose for the first time since March 2008. Big Japanese manufacturers reported being slightly more optimistic about business conditions but cut capital spending sharply.
The ISM survey of U.S. activity hasn't noted growth in manufacturing since January 2008. The index includes new orders, production, employment, inventories, prices, and export and import orders. It is based on a survey of ISM members from 18 industries.
The third quarter started on a positive note on Wall Street as investors hoped an economic recovery was beginning to take shape. The Dow Jones industrial average added more than 57 points 8,504.06, and broader indexes also gained.
The pace of manufacturing layoffs may have slowed since winter but it has not stopped.
Farm machinery company Deere & Co. said this week that 800 salaried employees, or 3 percent of its salaried work force, took a voluntary buyout offer. That's four times as many as the company expected when it announced the program in April.
In June, Cessna Aircraft Co., which makes corporate jets, said it would cut 1,300 jobs by this summer on top of 6,900 earlier layoffs.
- Will the Fed raise rates? Will the dollar continue its slide? CNBC experts weigh in on the year ahead.
- Goldman Sachs has forbidden employees from gathering in private holiday parties of 12 or more.
- Do you have what it takes to run your own business? Ask yourself these questions.
- Heavily armed pirates in Somalia have set up a sort of stock exhange to fund their hijackings.
- Since its launch in 1998, Google has become a primary force on the Internet. How much do you know about the company?
- A famed author has written all his work on an old typewriter that is now up for auction. The NYT reports.









