The Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank issued a report showing there is still modest growth of manufacturing activity in its district that includes Oklahoma.
The Bank indicated that the month-over-month finished goods price index was up while the raw materials price index was lower. And price expectations are expected to hold steady for the next six months.
” The slow and steady increase in factory activity was driven by durable goods producers, particularly wood products, fabricated metals, electrical equipment and appliances, and furniture manufacturing,” stated Chad Wilkerson, Vice President and Oklahoma City Branch Executive.
Month-over-month indexes were somewhat mixed. The production index jumped back into positive territory, while the order backlog index turned negative for the first time since June 2017. Most year-over-year factory indexes eased from the previous month, and the composite index decreased from 38 to 31. Future factory activity expectations remained solid. The future composite index eased slightly from 22 to 18, while the future production index increased.
The bank also surveyed business leaders about the impact of the partial government shutdown and got these responses.
“Our business is more impacted by the tension with China and tariffs than with the government shutdown. Prices of steel and plastic have increased by 30-40 percent and 25 percent tariffs are putting us in the RED.”
“Tariffs are affecting sales at the consumer end. We are reducing our work force as sales have slowed due to higher costs.”
“Labor is still the issue in the plant. [There is a] shortage of non-skilled laborers.”
“Overall, our business volumes have remained strong. International business was up again in 2018, now at 16 percent of our business.”
“We are continuing to work towards increasing our capacity, although significant expansion takes at least a year. We are moving at a very measured pace so that we aren’t over-exposed if there is a substantial change in the economic / business environment. We are seeing upward pressures on wages.”
“There are a lot of uncertainties floating around – tariffs, shutdown, political, etc. Settling some of these, especially around tariffs, will help with business confidence.”
“We are debt free but the interest rates impact our customers. We hope to see a stabilization in the economy with more people entering the workforce and the resulting wages supporting continued growth.”
“We are unable to receive data we normally obtain from federal offices due to the federal government shutdown.”
“If the shutdown begins to hurt the general economy or overall consumer confidence we will be negatively impacted.”
“Since the federal government shutdown, there are fewer customer with expendable income, impacting retail sales which impacts our wholesale sales.”
“As yet, we’ve seen no effect from the federal government shutdown but expect to later in the quarter.”
“We cannot export due to federal government agencies not at work.”