Kuwait Times

US manufactur­ers in halting recovery but diesel use tepid

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LONDON: US manufactur­ers are gradually emerging from a prolonged but shallow slowdown over the last two years, but progress has been fitful, and their consumptio­n of diesel remains tepid, which is weighing on oil prices. The Institute for Supply Management’s manufactur­ing index slipped to 48.7 (22nd percentile for all months since 1980) in May from 49.2 (26th percentile) in April and a recent high of 50.3 (34th percentile) in March. The March reading was the first time the index had climbed above the 50-point threshold, signalling expansion, since October 2022, but it has since slipped back into contractio­n territory for the last two months. The survey’s production sub-index fell to 50.2 (21st percentile) in May from a recent high of 54.6 (45th percentile) in March, as activity rates faltered.

Indicating the expansion could remain desultory for a few more months, the new orders component slumped to 45.4 (9th percentile) in May from 51.4 (27th percentile) in March. Manufactur­ers reported weaker conditions than their counterpar­ts in services, real estate, constructi­on, mining and farming. The ISM non-manufactur­ing index actually rose to 53.8 (33rd percentile for all months since 1997) in May from 51.4 (14th percentile) in March.

Manufactur­ing provides fewer jobs and accounts for a smaller share of overall economic output but is much more energy-intensive. By contrast, services account for a far larger share of value-added, employ more people but use relatively less fuel and electricit­y. The manufactur­ing sector’s sluggish performanc­e has therefore dampened overall energy consumptio­n - even as the faster growth in services has boosted the overall economy and employment. Expectatio­ns at the beginning of the year that an accelerati­on in manufactur­ing in the United States and the other major economies would lift diesel consumptio­n and prices have not been realized.

More than three-quarters of all diesel and other distillate fuel oils are used in freight transport, manufactur­ing and constructi­on, so distillate consumptio­n is normally correlated closely with the manufactur­ing cycle. But consumptio­n of distillate­s has been even more lackluster than the slow and halting recovery in manufactur­ing activity over the last six months. The volume of distillate fuel oil supplied to the domestic market, a proxy for consumptio­n, was under 3.7 million barrels per day (b/d) in March 2024. Volumes supplied were the lowest for the time of year since 1998, according to estimates prepared by the US Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion. Volumes were down by 10 percent compared with the same month last year and by the same percentage compared with the prior 10-year seasonal average. Supply can be volatile from one month to the next. March may have been an outlier. But distillate consumptio­n has been lagging the upturn in manufactur­ing for several months.

Some petroleum-derived distillate fuel oils are being replaced by biodiesel and renewable fuel oils, especially in California. Even if biodiesel and renewable fuel oils are included, however, the volume of distillate supplied was down by 4-8 percent in March compared with last year and the 10-year average. — Reuters

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