US ISM Manufacturing PMI Expands for Second Consecutive Month, but Tariff Concerns Emerge

2025-03-04

The U.S. February manufacturing PMI stood at 50.3 (prior: 50.9) in February, according to Institute for Supply Management (ISM) on March 3 , marking the second consecutive month of expansion but falling short of market expectations of 50.7.

In component indices, the new orders index ended its five-month upward trend, sharply declining to the contraction territory at 48.6 (previous: 55.1), marking the largest drop since April 2020. The report pointed out that businesses have taken a conservative and cautious approach toward potential tariff policies, leading to a slowdown in new order demand. Meanwhile, the production index saw a slight decline but remained in expansion at 50.7 (previous: 52.5).

At the same time, the inventories index climbed further to 49.9 (previous: 45.9), while supplier deliveries rose to 54.5 (previous: 50.9), reflecting businesses stockpiling in advance to mitigate potential tariff impacts, which has led to higher inventory levels and longer delivery times.

The employment index, after briefly expanding last month, fell back into contraction at 47.6 (previous: 50.3), with only the transportation sector among the six major industries showing expansion. The report indicated that companies continued to reduce staffing and slow hiring amid persistent uncertainty in the business environment, with the hiring-to-layoff recovery ratio remaining at 1:1, consistent with January.

On other indices, the prices index surged to 62.4 (previous: 54.9), marking the largest monthly increase since January 2024 and the highest level since June 2022. The report noted that although tariffs are expected to take effect in mid-March, prices have already risen by approximately 20% in advance, raising further uncertainty regarding the trajectory of inflation in the coming months.

Overall, the growing uncertainty surrounding tariff policies, combined with increasing price pressures, has dampened the optimism seen in previous months. At the same time, businesses are still deliberating on whether the tariff burden should be absorbed by suppliers or passed on to consumers, further suppressing new order demand while raising inventory levels.

Should the tariff policies be fully implemented, the manufacturing sector will likely face more pronounced cost pressures and demand slowdown. The ability to sustain expansion moving forward will depend on tariff negotiations, businesses' capacity to absorb costs, and the resilience of consumer demand.

Following the data release, the Atlanta Federal Reserve's GDPNow model revised its first-quarter GDP annualized growth estimate from -1.5% to -2.8%, heightening concerns over a potential economic slowdown. This also intensified market expectations for rate cuts, leading to a further decline in the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield to approximately 4.16%.