- Markit
Business activity in the US manufacturing sector continued to decline in May with new orders increasing at the slowest rate so far this year, as manufacturers have been hit hard by a stronger US Dollar and tepid global demand. Markit's preliminary manufacturing PMI eased to 50.5 this month, down from 50.8 in April, when it logged the worst performance since September 2009. The gauge remained well below the post-crisis average of 54.1. A renewed decline in production was one key factor weighing on the headline index in May, alongside softer new order growth and further cuts to stocks of inputs.
The data comes at a time when the whole sector has been facing stark headwinds blowing from Greenback's appreciation, a slowing China's economy, and a volatile stock market. Furthermore, lower oil prices have hit manufacturers tied to the energy industry, undermining burgeoning domestic production, lowering demand for steel and drilling equipment and other manufactured products used in the industry. Nevertheless, last week the US Federal Reserve increased expectations for a June interest rate hike by saying the market was not taking the possibility of a hike seriously enough, according to the minutes of its latest policy meeting.
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