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BLOG — Sep 28, 2021
Learn in-depth tips and background insights about Purchasing Managers Index (PMI™) from the experts who compile and analyse the survey data at IHS Markit. These articles dig into the history of the PMI surveys and illustrate how the headline PMI and its various subindices can be used to gain valuable insights into economic growth, hiring, inflation, supply delays and capacity constraints around the world and across business sectors. As such, the articles also provide substantial insight into how to use the PMI for economic analysts, investors, traders and policymakers.
Chris Williamson| Chief Business Economist, S&P Global Market Intelligence
Two different sets of surveys of US business conditions are provided by S&P Global (previously IHS Markit) and the ISM. This document analyses the main differences in the methodologies, which can cause divergences between the survey findings and also generate different use-cases for the surveys.
We note that S&P Global PMI data offer benefits in terms of earlier publication and higher correlations with comparable official data, as well as exhibiting lower volatility (providing clearer signals of turning points in key economic metrics) and providing greater insights into sub-sector level economic trends. These advantages of the S&P Global PMI can be traced to larger survey sample sizes and the use of a more advanced and widely used methodology than adopted by the ISM.
Chris Williamson| Chief Business Economist, S&P Global Market Intelligence
The new export orders index from S&P Global's PMI business surveys tracks foreign demand for both goods and services. The data can be used to gauge export demand over time across countries and sectors.
The new export orders index can also be aggregated to provide a useful and timely guide to global or regional trade flows, allowing insights into changing demand conditions well ahead of comparable official data.
Chris Williamson| Chief Business Economist, IHS Markit
The suppliers' delivery times index from IHS Markit's PMI business surveys captures the extent of supply chain delays in an economy, which in turn acts as a useful barometer of capacity constraints. The index therefore helps gauge the degree to which the current demand/supply environment is indicative of either a buyers'- or sellers'-market, and hence provides valuable information on developing inflation trends.
Chris Williamson| Chief Business Economist, IHS Markit
The aggregation of different components into one headline 'PMI' indicator, designed as an overall barometer of business conditions, means a considerable amount of the value can be found in the PMI's component indices that is not always seen in the headline figure.
Chris Williamson| Chief Business Economist, IHS Markit
The backlogs of work index from IHS Markit's PMI business surveys captures the volume of orders that a company has received but has yet to either start work on or complete.
As such, the index is a useful barometer of the extent to which companies are struggling to cope with demand and can hence act as a leading indicator of the expansion of capacity through either investment or hiring. The index can also provide useful information about pricing power and developing inflation trends, as well as corporate earnings.
As such, the backlogs of work index also generates powerful signals for investment strategy.
Chris Williamson| Chief Business Economist, IHS Markit
The most common mistake we see in PMI charts is the incorrect use of the headline PMI for manufacturing. The headline PMI is a gauge based on a number of survey sub-indices which is designed to track the overall health of manufacturing. However, often we see this index incorrectly used as a gauge of manufacturing output growth, which can give misleading signals - especially when used to compare manufacturing performance relative to the service sector. Instead, the manufacturing PMI output index needs to be used.
Chris Williamson| Chief Business Economist, IHS Markit
The PMI output index is the survey's principal gauge of economic growth and can provide valuable insights into GDP, service sector growth and industrial production trends well ahead of official data. A simple statistical process can be used to produce growth rate equivalents for comparable official economic data. This article explains the methodology behind the output index and how to use the index to track economic growth.
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