Kansas City Fed January Manufacturing Composite Index Rises to 5 Vs -3 in December$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')b]Manufacturers in the Plains states say activity is bouncing back this month, according to a regional Federal Reserve bank report released Thursday.
The Kansas City Fed's manufacturing composite index rebounded to 5 in January after it fell to -3 in December from 6 in November. Respondents blamed bad weather for the weak December reading, the Kansas City Fed said.
A reading below zero denotes contraction. The Kansas City Fed revised 2013 data to reflect new seasonal factors, but the new factors did not change the top-line composite number for December.
On a year-over-year comparison, the January composite index increased to 8 from 3 last month.
"We were encouraged to see overall regional factory activity grow in January after dropping last month," said Chad Wilkerson, an economist at the Kansas City Fed.
Even so, weather is still a factor this month, as the production index remained contractionary at -8, but better than -13 in December.
The new orders index increased to 5 in January from 1 in December. The backlog index improved to -1 from -5.
The shipments index increased to 3 from -10.
The employment index jumped to 11 from 0 in December. The January reading is the highest since October 2011.
"We have had to raise our starting wage at the first of the year to get a more qualified candidate," one respondent said. "We are still struggling for good help."
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