- Prior month 52.3 last month.
Summary of the details from the report
- PMI (Headline): 54.5 (vs 52.3 prior) → strongest expansion since May 2022
- New Orders:
- Strong increase (4-year high)
- Driven mainly by domestic demand
- Exports weak (down for 11 straight months; tariffs + geopolitics)
- Output (Production):
- Sharp rise (strongest since April 2022)
- Largely tied to inventory/stock building, not organic demand
- Inventories:
- Finished goods: Increased (first rise in 3 months)
- Pre-production inputs: Slight increase
- Broad theme = defensive stockpiling
- Purchasing Activity:
- Surged (fastest in 4 years)
- Firms buying ahead of price increases + supply disruptions
- Supply Chains / Delivery Times:
- Worsened (longer lead times)
- Most significant delays since Aug 2022
- Driven by material shortages
- Backlogs of Work:
- Increased sharply
- Reflects strong orders + supply constraints + reduced labor
- Employment:
- Declined (first drop in 9 months)
- Firms not replacing workers due to cost pressures
- Input Costs:
- Rising sharply (10-month high)
- Inflation still elevated
- Output Prices (Charges):
- Increased strongly
- Firms passing through higher costs (largest rise since June 2025)
- Business Confidence (Outlook):
- Improved (highest since Feb 2025)
-
Based on expectations of:
- Less severe war impact
- Easing tariff pressures
Bottom line:
- Growth looks strong on the surface, but much of it is inventory-driven (front-loading) amid inflation + supply fears, not clean demand.
Chris Williamson chief business economists at the S&P Global marketing intelligent commenting on the report said:
“The surge in manufacturing activity in April is not the cause
for cheer that at first glance it suggests. A key driving force
behind the upturn is the need for companies to get ahead of
further feared price rises and supply shortages, providing a
short-term boost that could fade in the coming months as
headwinds to the economy continue to build.
“Growth of purchasing activity hit a rate not seen for four
years, since the pandemic, amid increasingly widespread
supply delays and price rises commonly linked to the war in
the Middle East, which has exacerbated existing pressure
on supply and inflation from tariffs.
“Shipments, orders and production have all been boosted
by the stock building, notably among larger companies with
the deepest pockets.
“However, employment has fallen as firms grow increasingly
worried over the need to reduce cost overheads amid an
environment of rising raw material prices, while selling
prices have jumped higher as producers seek to protect
their margins.
“More encouragingly, business expectations for output
in the year ahead have improved, partly reflecting hopes
that the US will be less affected by the war than previously
feared, and less than other economies, as well as reduced
concerns over the impact of tariffs given the recent
Supreme Court ruling. However, some of these improved
expectations of future production gains reflected a reaction
to better than anticipated order book inflows in April, which
may prove to be a chimera as the stock building boost
fades.
At 10 AM, the ISM Manufacturing PMI for April will be released with expectations of 53.0 versus 52.7 last month.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.
