Contact Mace News President
Tony Mace tony@macenews.com
to find a customer- and markets-oriented brand of news coverage with a level of individualized service unique to the industry. A market participant told us he believes he has his own White House correspondent as Mace News provides breaking news and/or audio feeds, stories, savvy analysis, photos and headlines delivered how you want them. And more. And this is important because you won’t get it anywhere else. That’s MICRONEWS. We know how important to you are the short advisories on what’s coming up, whether briefings, statements, unexpected changes in schedules and calendars and anything else that piques our interest.
No matter the area being covered, the reporter is always only a telephone call or message away. We check with you frequently to see how we can improve. Have a question, need to be briefed via video or audio-only on a topic’s state of play, keep us on speed dial. See the list of interest areas we cover elsewhere
on this site.
—
You can have two weeks reduced price no-obligation trial for $199. No self-renewing contracts. Suspend, renew coverage at any time. Stay with a topic like trade while it’s hot and suspend coverage or switch coverage areas when it’s not. We serve customers one by one, 24/7.
—
Tony Mace was the top editorial executive for Market News
International for two decades.
Washington Bureau Chief Denny Gulino had the same title at Market News for 18 years.
Similar experience undergirds our service in Ottawa, London, Brussels and in Asia.
President
Mace News
D.C. Bureau Chief
Mace News
Federal Reserve
Mace News
Reporter and expert on the currency market.
Mace News
Reporter and expert on derivatives and fixed income markets.
Mace News
Financial Journalist
Mace News
Reporter, economic and political news.
Japan and Canada
Mace News
–ISM Manufacturing Index at 49.0 Vs. 50.3 in February, Below Consensus (49.6)
–ISM’s Fiore: Activity ‘Overshadowed’ by US Import Tariffs; So Many Unknowns, More Confusion
–Fiore: Still Think Lower New Orders, Higher Inventories, Slower Supply Deliveries Will Clear Up
–Fiore: Tariffs Could Prompt Workers Hit by Higher Costs of Living to Demand Wage Hikes, Triggering Wage-Price Cycle
By Max Sato
(MaceNews) – U.S. manufacturing activity slipped back into contraction in March after two months of growth as many firms, confused and uncertain over the Trump administration’s protectionist trade policy, trimmed production and workers in response to lower demand and surging costs.
The latest monthly data released Tuesday by the Institute for Supply Management also showed that about two-thirds of the surveyed firms were focused on the impact of existing and upcoming import tariffs and retaliatory measures by major U.S. trading partners ahead of the administration’s “reciprocal tariffs” expected to be unveiled Wednesday.
The ISM sector index fell 1.3 percentage points to 49.0 in March, below the median economist forecast of 49.6, after slipping 0.6 point to 50.3 in February and rising 1.7 points to 50.9 in January, the first time the index had popped above the make-or-break line of 50.
“Demand and production retreated and destaffing continued, as panelists’ companies responded to demand confusion,” Timothy Fiore, chair of the ISM Manufacturing Business Survey Committee, said in a statement. “Prices growth accelerated due to tariffs, causing new order placement backlogs, supplier delivery slowdowns and manufacturing inventory growth.”
Fiore told reporters that as many as 68% of the respondents’ comments were about the tariffs in the March survey, overshadowing supply chain management activity.
Fiore was asked whether he would stick to his comments made last month that the combination of lower new orders, higher inventories and slower supply deliveries was a “one-month blip and thus should “clear up” in March or April.
“I think they will clear up,” he replied. “The imposition of tariffs is going to have a one-time hit.” But he also noted that more tariffs were expected to come and that the impact seen in the March report was primarily from the tariffs on steel and aluminum imports as well as those on Chinese-made products that had already been imposed. “If we are only dealing with those tariffs, this thing will resolve itself probably by the time we get to May.”
President Trump is expected to impose “reciprocal tariffs” on trading partners on Wednesday, targeting countries and regions that have a trade surplus with the United States. The action is aimed at reducing the trade deficit but it will also push up import costs that would hurt U.S. households and businesses.
Trump has already slapped 25% tariffs on Canadian and Mexican imports to the U.S. and an additional 10% on China over illegal immigration and drug trafficking for which he blames those countries. He has also imposed a 25% tariff on all imported autos and auto parts.
On the question of whether U.S. manufacturers would benefit from the import tariffs and a shift of overseas factories back to domestic locations as administration officials have claimed, Fiore said, “I do not see tariffs as being a way to reassure U.S. manufacturing and maintain the same cost structure that we have today,” he said, pointing that U.S. firms import various goods produced offshore because it is less expensive to do so.
Fiore warned that tariffs may raise the cost of living, which in turn could prompt workers to demand wage hikes to match the price increases, triggering an upward wage-price cycle. “We are still in that one-time event and that is still clipping our demand and we still have the input side to accelerate,” he said.
Among the five subindexes that directly factor into the manufacturing PMI, three were in negative territory: the new orders index at 45.2 (-3.4 points), production 48.3 (-2.4) and employment 44.7 (-2.9). Two were above the key 50 line: supplier deliveries 53.5 (-1.0) and manufacturer inventories 53.4 (+3.5).
The new orders index contracted in March for the second consecutive month after three consecutive months of expansion. It stood at 45.2, down 3.4 points from 48.6 in February and hitting the lowest since May 2023 (43.4).
The index hasn’t indicated consistent growth since a 24-month streak of expansion that ended in May 2022.
The production index fell 2.4 points to 48.3, slipping into contraction territory after two consecutive months of expansion. Previously, the index had been in contraction territory for eight consecutive months. Prior to the first two months of 2025, the last time the index registered above 50 was in April 2024 (50.7).
The employment index stood at 44.7, falling 2.9 points from 47.6 the previous month, posting its second straight month of contraction after expanding in January, with seven straight months of contraction before that. Since May 2022, th index has contracted in 28 of 35 months. “Freezing and attrition were the primary tools used for the second straight month, in lieu of the more dramatic and costly layoff process,” Fiore said.
Delivery performance of suppliers to manufacturing organizations was slower in March. The supplier deliveries index (the only one that is inversed) stood at 53.5, down a full point from 54.5 in February, indicating slower delivery performance for the fourth straight month and the eighth in the past 12 months.
The manufacturing inventories index indicated the first growth in seven months, rising 3.5 points to 53.4 in March from 49.9 in February. The index has gained 7.5 points the last two months to reach its highest level since October 2022, when it was also at 53.4. Companies continued to pull forward (advance) deliveries of materials in an attempt to minimize the financial impacts of potential tariffs, Fiore said.
Among other subindexes, the prices paid index continued surging in March, up 7.0 points at 69.4 after soaring 7.5 points to 62.4 in February. It remains the highest since 78.5 recorded in June 2022, when price pressures were easing month by month.
By Max Sato
(MaceNews) – The Bank of Japan’s quarterly Tankan business survey is forecast to show confidence among manufacturers slipped in the March quarter in the face of stiff tariffs on U.S. imports of metals and vehicles as well as President Trump’s plans to slap “reciprocal tariffs” on imports from global trading partners.
China’s struggling recovery from its property market problems is also seen putting a damper on corporate sentiment overall. Sentiment among non-manufacturers appears to have edged up or being flat. The tourism industry is benefiting from an influx of foreign visitors amid the weak yen while rising costs of living are hurting consumer spending.
The Tankan diffusion index showing sentiment among major manufacturers is forecast at 12, down from 14 in December. The index measuring sentiment among major non-manufacturers is seen at 34, easing from 33 in the previous poll.
The index for smaller manufacturers is forecast to dip to -1 from +1 while that for their non-manufacturers is seen unchanged at 16.
The BOJ will release the results of its Tankan business survey conducted from late February through late March at 0850 JST on Tuesday, April 1 (1950 EDT/2350 GMT Sunday, March 31).
Major firms are expected to project their plans for business investment in equipment would rise a combined 9.1% on the year in fiscal 2024 ending in March 2025, down from +11.3% in the December survey and indicating firms are becoming more cautious in the face of a global trade war. Capex plans are generally supported by demand for automation amid labor shortages as well as government-led digital transformation and emission control.
Smaller firms are expected to maintain their combined capital spending plans at a 4.7% increase after lifting it to +4.0% in December from +2.6% in September. Those firms tend to have conservative plans at the start of each fiscal year and revise them up later.
Looking ahead, major firms are forecast by economists to present a combined 2.6% rise in capex for fiscal 2025 ending in March 2026 (their first estimate) while smaller firms are expected to start their plans for the incoming fiscal year with a 3.9% drop.
BOJ policymakers will analyze this and other pieces of data ahead of their next policy meeting on April 30-May 1, when the board will update their medium-term growth and inflation forecasts.
At its latest meeting on March 18-19, the BOJ’s nine-member board voted unanimously to maintain the target for overnight interest rate at 0.5%, as widely expected, after voting 8 to 1 to raise the policy rate by another 25 basis points to 0.5% in January in a third rate hike during the current normalization process that began in March 2024.
The next rate hike is expected to be in July or September, depending on economic data and the impact of geopolitical risks. Members are closely monitoring whether expected high wage increases by major firms will spread to smaller firms in fiscal 2025 starting on April 1 at a time when real wages are falling, which could hurt consumption further and generate deflationary pressures.
The board continues to expect inflation to be anchored around its 2% target by early 2026, saying, “In the second half of the projection period (from fiscal 2024 through fiscal 2026 ending March 2027), underlying CPI inflation is likely to be at a level that is generally consistent with the price stability target.”
Governor Kazuo Ueda told a post-meeting news conference on March 19 that he would “keep in mind” heightened upside risks to inflation warned about by some BOJ board members at the latest two-day meeting among other things when he formulates monetary policy.
“I think the uncertainties over global growth are increasing but if you take a look at the domestic wage negotiations, the positive cycle is growing,” Ueda said, noting that wage hikes proposed by large firms are a little higher than expected.
But the governor also said the BOJ would not raise its policy rate just to contain a spike in the prices of rice in the aftermath of acute domestic supply shortages because “that would cool off consumption.”
Ueda warned that the underlying inflation is estimated to be still under the bank’s 2% price stability target. “To put it simply, the price increase in service prices is not so strong,” he said, underscoring the slow progress in lifting regulated wages as well as underpaid workers at restaurants and tourism.
The BOJ is believed to be on course for two more 25 basis point rate hikes that would take the overnight interest rate target to 1% by late 2025 or early 2026 as part of its gradual normalization process after more than a decade of large-scale easing.
The BOJ under Governor Ueda, who took office in April 2023, shifted gear in March 2024 with its first rate hike in 17 years and an end to the seven-year-old yield curve control framework, following a decade of large monetary easing aimed at reflating the economy. The board stood pat in December, October and September after voting 7 to 2 in July to hike the rate to 0.25% from a range of 0% to 0.1%.
– May Have To Leave Rates Unchanged Longer Or Hike Rates If Inflation Worsens
By Steven K. Beckner
(MaceNews) – Although downside risks to the labor market have increased, so have upside risks to inflation and inflation expectations, and such a combination could create a difficult monetary policy dilemma, St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank President Alberto Musalem warned Wednesday.
While allowing for a resumption of interest rate cuts if the economy and/or labor market soften further, he allowed for extending the current “modestly restrictive policy” for a longer period, or even tightening policy if inflation and inflation expectations worsen.
Musalem, a voting member of the Fed’s rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee, said the FOMC would prefer to take “a balanced approach” when both inflation and employment diverge from its goals, but he said that would become difficult if longer term inflation expectations become “unanchored.” Should that happen, he said the FOMC would have to focus on fighting inflation, not on growing the economy.
For the time being, Musalem, a voting member of the Fed’s rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee, said the Fed should take “a patient and vigilant approach” in pursuit of its dual mandate of maximum employment and price stability.
He told the Paducah, Kentucky, Chamber of Commerce he will be paying particularly close attention to longer term inflation expectations, noting some indications they have risen lately.
Although higher tariffs are likely to have limited direct effects on inflation, “indirect, second-round effects” on inflation could be more persistent and worrisome, Musalem cautioned
Musalem was speaking a week after he and his fellow Fed policymakers voted to leave the federal funds rate unchanged in a target range of 4.25% to 4.5%., while tilting toward further rate cuts. The 19 FOMC participants projected the policy rate will end 2025 at 3.9% (a range of 3.75% to 4.00%) in the quarterly Summary of Economic Projections – the same as in the December SEP.
Following the March 19 meeting, Chairman Jerome Powell repeated his belief that monetary policy is “in a good place” and that the FOMC needs be in “no hurry” to cut rates. He called the economy and labor markets “solid,” while expressing concern about the potential for tariffs to increase inflation, if only in a “transitory” fashion. The combination of increased inflation and slower growth forecasts in the SEP “cancel(led) each other out” and led officials to leave their rate projections unchanged, he said.
Powell continually emphasized “heightened uncertainty about the economic outlook,” given market-shaking changes in trade and other policies propounded by President Trump since his inauguration. “(I)t’s just …. really hard to know how this is going to work out…”
“(W)e think our policy is in a good place … where we can move in the direction where we need to,” he continued. “But in the meantime, it’s really appropriate to wait for further clarity, and of course, … the cost of doing that, given that the economy is still solid, are very low.”
Like Powell, Musalem stressed economic and policy uncertainties, particularly with regard to tariffs, and suggested that the FOMC will have to be very careful how it responds, lest it make a policy mistake. He put particular emphasis on inflation expectations.
For the present, he said, “If the economy remains strong and inflation remains above our target, then I believe the current, modestly restrictive policy will remain appropriate until there is confidence inflation is converging to 2%.”
But the appropriate policy stance could change, depending on how things evolve, he added. “If the labor market remains resilient and the second-round effects from tariffs become evident, or if medium- to longer-term inflation expectations begin to increase actual inflation or its persistence, then modestly restrictive policy will be appropriate for longer or a more restrictive policy may need to be considered.”
On the other hand, “If labor market conditions were to deteriorate, with inflation stable or declining toward target and inflation expectations anchored at a level consistent with 2% inflation, policy could be eased further,” Musalem said in prepared remarks.
“At this juncture, a patient approach, involving careful assessment of incoming information, the outlook and risks, will help us as we seek maximum employment, price stability and a durable economic expansion,” he continued.
For the SEP, Musalem said he had both lowered his GDP growth forecast and increased his inflation forecast after noting that already “recent convergence toward the target has been little, even before potential tariff effects.” He declined to give his funds rate “dot.”
He warned that “the risks that inflation will stall above 2% or move higher in the near term appear to have increased.”
What’s more, Musalem noted that “near-term inflation expectations have risen, with higher tariffs often cited as the main driver.”
“Thus far, market data and surveys suggest that longer-term inflation expectations have not risen appreciably and have in fact been stable, but the most recent University of Michigan survey of consumers is a notable exception,” he added.
Musalem expects “the economic expansion will continue at a moderate pace, the labor market will remain healthy around full employment, and inflation will decline to 2% by 2027.”
“However, I see the risks as skewed toward some further cooling of the labor market and inflation remaining above 2% or possibly rising in the near term,” he went on, adding that “a scenario involving labor market softening and above-target or rising inflation would present a challenging environment for monetary policy.”
Tariff increases complicate the Fed’s job, Musalem made clear. While the “direct effects” of higher tariffs on imported goods would likely have limited, “one-off” effects, he said, indirect effects “could contribute to more persistent underlying inflation through second-round effects on non-imported goods and services.”
For monetary policymakers, “it could be appropriate to ‘look through’ direct effects of higher tariffs on the price level,” but said it may need to “lean against indirect and second-round effects.”
Musalem, who succeeded Jim Bullard as head of the Fed’s eighth district nearly a year ago, cautioned his listeners to “be wary of assuming that the impact of tariff increases on inflation will be entirely temporary, or that a full ‘look-through’ strategy will necessarily be appropriate.”
“I would be especially vigilant about indirect, second-round effects on inflation. I would also be uncomfortable if medium- to longer-term inflation expectations begin to rise,” he went on, adding “With inflation already above 2% in a full-employment economy, the stakes are potentially higher than they would be if inflation were at or below target.”
Musalem said it is “probable” the economy will face both slower growth and higher inflation, although he said he is expecting neither recession nor stagflation. But he suggested that wouldn’t be a big problem so long as longer-term inflation expectations are well anchored. Then, “monetary policy can be responsive to both sides of the dual mandate…”
If the Fed were to face weaker growth and higher inflation, he acknowledged “that presents some challenges for monetary policy…both sides of mandate working in opposite directions, and we only have one instrument.”
In such a situation, he said the FOMC would “adopt a “balanced approach.”
It would be “setting interest rates with a few things in mind,” he explained. “Understanding how far off we are from the employment/growth side of the target..and how far off inflation is from the target and balance that.”
He said the FOMC would also need to “consider what is the convergence time..for those two variables. That’s the balanced approach.”
However, Musalem emphasized that the key is keeping medium- to longer-term inflation expectations “well anchored.” The worst of all possible worlds, he suggested, would be if tariffs or other factors drove up inflation while at the same time hurting the economy in a climate of rising longer term inflation expectations.
“That balanced approach works well when inflation expectations are anchored,” he elaborated,but “if inflation expectations threaten to become unanchored or are unanchored, then the balanced approach may not work…”
Then, “we would probably have to lean into the inflation side to make sure inflation and inflation expectations remain anchored,” he said, because “ultimately, we cannot generate full employment if inflation expectations are not anchored.”
Following up on Musalem’s comments in a media scrum, MaceNews asked him whether he believes the FOMC should fight inflation even at the cost of recession if inflation expectations become unanchored in a climate of economic weakness and elevated inflation.
Musalem responded by suggesting the FOMC would have little choice but to focus on fighting inflation. “It is very difficult to achieve maximum employment without price stability,” he replied. “That’s the reason why if inflation expectations were to rise or become unanchored, the balanced approach may no longer be the best approach.”
Were inflation expectations to become unanchored, “we would probably have to think a little harder about the price side of the mandate,” he also told reporters.
Inflation expectations have become an increasingly touchy issue for Fed policymakers, especially since the University of Michigan disclosed that its consumer sentiment survey found that five to 10-year inflation expectations had risen to 3.9% in February — highest reading since 1993.
Last Wednesday, Powell continued to call longer term inflation expectations “well anchored,” referring to a leap in the University of Michigan’s five-to-10-year measure as “an outlier.”
Earlier this week, New York Fed President John Williams also said, “there are no signs of inflation expectations becoming unmoored relative to the pre-pandemic period.”
But Musalem is not the only one who sounds less sanguine. Fed Governor Adriana Kugler said on Tuesday she is “paying close attention to the acceleration of price increases and higher inflation expectations, especially given the recent bout of inflation in the past few years.”
By Max Sato (MaceNews) – The Bank of Canada on Wednesday is widely expected to trim its policy interest rate – the target for overnight
By Max Sato (MaceNews) – Lukewarm economic growth lingered during much of 2024 in Japan after three quarters of drops but consumption is chilled by
– Largely Brushes Off Signs of Softening, Uncertainty For Now – Economy Doesn’t Need Fed to Do Anything: ‘We Can And We Should Wait’ –
–ISM Services Index at 53.5 in February Vs. 52.8 in January, Above Median Forecast 52.7–ISM’s Miller: Services PMI Has Been Trending Down but More Stable
WASHINGTON (MaceNews) – As one round of tariffs took effect Tuesday and more were threatened, rampant uncertainty permeated plunging U.S. stock markets while interest rates
–ISM Manufacturing Index at 50.3 Vs. 50.9 in January, Below Consensus (50.5)–ISM’s Fiore: February Report ‘Overshadowed’ by Tariff Talk among Firms–Fiore: Lower New Orders, Higher
– Keep Monetary Policy ‘Modestly Restrictive’ Til Confident Inflation Headed to 2% By Steven K. Beckner (MaceNews) – Richmond Federal Reserve Bank President Thomas Barkin
– FOMC Voter Says Policy Must Stay Restrictive Until Sure Inflation Headed To 2% By Steven K. Beckner (MaceNews) – St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank
Contact Mace News President
Tony Mace tony@macenews.com
to find a customer- and markets-oriented brand of news coverage with a level of individualized service unique to the industry. A market participant told us he believes he has his own White House correspondent as Mace News provides breaking news and/or audio feeds, stories, savvy analysis, photos and headlines delivered how you want them. And more. And this is important because you won’t get it anywhere else. That’s MICRONEWS. We know how important to you are the short advisories on what’s coming up, whether briefings, statements, unexpected changes in schedules and calendars and anything else that piques our interest.
No matter the area being covered, the reporter is always only a telephone call or message away. We check with you frequently to see how we can improve. Have a question, need to be briefed via video or audio-only on a topic’s state of play, keep us on speed dial. See the list of interest areas we cover elsewhere
on this site.
—
You can have two weeks reduced price no-obligation trial for $199. No self-renewing contracts. Suspend, renew coverage at any time. Stay with a topic like trade while its hot and suspend coverage or switch coverage areas when it’s not. We serve customers one by one 24/7.
—
Tony Mace was the top editorial executive for Market News International for two decades.
Washington Bureau Chief Denny Gulino had the same title at Market News for 18 years.
Similar experience undergirds our service in Ottawa, London, Brussels and in Asia.