Euro
gloom spreads across the Atlantic
Key
monthly snapshot of business in America shows manufacturing sliding
into recession
US
factories saw their biggest one-month drop in orders last month since
the 9/11 terrorist attacks as the effects from Europe's sovereign
debt crisis rippled across the Atlantic.
Amid
growing evidence that the battle to save the euro is now having a
global impact, a key monthly snapshot of business in America showed
manufacturing sliding into recession territory for the first time in
three years.
Shares
fell on Wall Street after traders were taken aback by a gloomy report
from the Institute for Supply Management in the US, which followed
downbeat news earlier in the day from China and the UK as well as the
17-nation eurozone.
Oil
prices also fell back sharply, losing almost $2 a barrel amid
concerns that weaker growth across the world economy would hit demand
for energy.
Analysts
were particularly concerned by the sharp drop in orders for US
factories last month, the main factor behind a drop in the ISM's
purchasing managers' index below the 50 level that separates
expansion from contraction. The ISM said the fall - which puts
pressure on the Federal Reserve to take fresh steps to boost growth -
from 53.5 to 49.7 was the first since the US was last in recession in
2009.
With
weak order books pointing to a protracted slowdown in manufacturing
over the coming months, the ISM will cause concern in the White House
given the importance of the economy in the close presidential
election race looming between president Barack Obama and his
Republican challenger Mitt Romney.
"The
fall in June's ISM manufacturing index to below 50 is the surest sign
yet that the US is catching the slowdown already underway in Europe
and China", said Paul Dales, US economist at Capital Economics.
Dales
said it was unlikely that the entire US economy would return to
recession as a result of the slowdown in manufacturing, but said the
economy's expansion in the second quarter of 2012 was likely to be
consistent with an annual growth rate of less than 1%. Firms that
responded to the ISM survey cited "uncertainties" in both
China and Europe for the problems they were having securing new
business.
Manufacturers
are now battling against the most challenging business climate since
the world economy was starting to emerge from the deep slump in the
winter of 2008-09 triggered by the collapse of Lehman Brothers. With
the survey for China showing industry in the world's second biggest
economy slowing further, the global manufacturing PMI produced by JP
Morgan and Markit fell to a three-year low of 48.9 last month.
Only
two countries in the eurozone - Austria and Ireland - reported an
expansion of their manufacturing sectors last month as the PMI for
the single currency area remained at its three-year low of 45.1.
Germany, a heavily export-dependent economy, posted a manufacturing
PMI of 45.0 after being hard hit by sluggish demand from China, the
US and the rest of the eurozone.
Europe's
bourses were still buoyed by the outcome of last week's Brussels
summit in which Germany reluctantly agreed to channel financial help
to ailing Spanish banks, and shrugged off the PMI surveys and news of
a fresh rise in unemployment. Shares rose in Frankfurt, Paris, Milan
and Madrid.
The
jobless rate for the eurozone climbed to 11.1% in May from 11% in
April, the highest level since the creation of the euro. Youth
unemployment rose to 22.6% in May, with 52.1% of the under 25s in
both Greece and Spain without work.
Meanwhile,
Britain's manufacturing sector remained in the doldrums last month as
the crisis in the eurozone took its toll of factory order books. The
latest industry survey from from CIPS/Markit showed the pace of
decline eased in June after a sharp decline in May, but that the
sector was still in recession.
June's
result was an improvement on the three-year low of 45.0 recorded in
May and not as bad as City economists had been expecting, but dealers
are now braced for a fresh dose of money creation from the Bank of
England under its quantitative easing programme later this week.
Threadneedle Street is expected to announce that it will buy at least
£50bn of government gilts over the coming months.
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