For New York manufacturers, new orders and shipments both declined substantially and unfilled orders “continued to shrink.” That’s according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which released the monthly Empire State Manufacturing Survey on April 15. The survey’s general business-conditions index rose 7 points in April, but remained underwater at -14.3, pointing to […]
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For New York manufacturers, new orders and shipments both declined substantially and unfilled orders “continued to shrink.”
That’s according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, which released the monthly Empire State Manufacturing Survey on April 15.
The survey’s general business-conditions index rose 7 points in April, but remained underwater at -14.3, pointing to continued contraction in the state’s manufacturing sector. The result was worse than the consensus economists’ expectation for a reading of -5.2, according to a Seeking Alpha article.
The index has been volatile in recent months. It declined 19 points to -20.9 in March after rising 41 points in February to -2.4, rebounding from a nearly four-year low in January but still remaining in negative territory.
The general business-conditions index is the monthly gauge of New York’s manufacturing sector. Based on firms responding to the survey, the April reading indicates business activity “continued to decline” in New York state, the New York Fed said in its April 15 report.
A negative index number indicates a decline in the state’s manufacturing sector, while a positive number shows expansion or growth in manufacturing activity.
Besides the decline in new orders and shipments, the Empire State Survey also found the six-month outlook for manufacturers improved, though optimism “remained subdued.”