GROWTH IN TENTH DISTRICT MANUFACTURING ACTIVITY EDGED HIGHER Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City Releases September Manufacturing Survey

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FOR RELEASE Thursday, September 25, 2014 EMBARGOED FOR 10 A.M. CENTRAL TIME CONTACT: Pam Campbell 405-270-8617 Pam.Campbell@kc.frb.org GROWTH IN TENTH DISTRICT MANUFACTURING ACTIVITY EDGED HIGHER Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City Releases September Manufacturing Survey KANSAS CITY, Mo. The Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City released the September Manufacturing Survey today. According to Chad Wilkerson, vice president and economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, the survey revealed that growth in Tenth District manufacturing activity edged higher, and producers expectations for future activity maintained their recent solid levels. We saw slightly faster growth this month after a sizable easing in August, Wilkerson said. This is despite continued sluggish activity in our important food processing segment, driven in part by higher beef costs this year. A summary of the September survey is attached. Results from past surveys and release dates for future surveys can be found at www.kansascityfed.org/research/indicatorsdata/mfg. The Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City serves the Tenth Federal Reserve District, encompassing the western third of Missouri; all of Kansas, Colorado, Nebraska, Oklahoma and Wyoming; and the northern half of New Mexico. As part of the nation s central bank, the Bank participates in setting national monetary policy, supervising and regulating numerous commercial banks and bank holding companies, and providing financial services to depository institutions. More information is available online at www.kansascityfed.org. ###

TENTH DISTRICT MANUFACTURING SUMMARY Growth in Tenth District manufacturing activity edged higher in September, and producers expectations for future activity maintained the solid level of the previous survey. Price indexes showed a mild decline from the previous month, and expectations for future price growth were mixed. Several firms continued to comment about difficulties finding qualified labor, resulting in some wage pressures. The month-over-month composite index was 6 in September, slightly higher than 3 in August but lower than 9 in July (Tables 1 & 2, Chart). The composite index is an average of the production, new orders, employment, supplier delivery time, and raw materials inventory indexes. The growth in manufacturing activity continued to occur primarily at durable goods-producing plants. Nondurable goods-producers experienced only a modest rise, with activity at some food processing plants continuing to decline in the face of higher beef prices. The production index increased from 4 to 12, and the shipment index also grew from a reading of 2 in August to 14. The employment index increased significantly from -4 in the last survey period to 7 in September. Most other month-over-month indexes eased compared to August s readings. The new orders and backlog of orders indexes both declined modestly. The inventory indexes also both experienced moderate declines, with materials now at -6 and finished goods at -1. Year-over-year factory indexes were mostly higher this survey period. The composite year-over-year index rose to 15, as compared to the previous survey reading of 13. The production index was moderately higher at 14, while capital expenditures and backlog of orders were also moderately higher. The volume of shipments index increased from 10 to 16 and the materials inventory increased from 15 to 18. The volume of new orders and number of employees were also slightly higher. Conversely, supplier delivery time and finished goods inventories indexes were lower at 12 and 8, respectively. Most of the future factory indexes were mildly lower compared to August, although the future composite index maintained its level of 17 due to strong expectations for production. The future production and future volume of shipments indexes were both at their highest levels in 5 months. The future volume of new orders and future backlog of orders also increased slightly. In contrast, the future new orders for export index fell to 0 from a previous level of 9. Both future inventories indexes declined with future materials inventory declining the most, from 7 to 2. The majority of price indexes experienced a decline this month. The month-over-month raw materials price index was steady at 20, while the finished goods price index decreased from 6 to 2. The year-over-year finished goods price index eased slightly once again, but the raw materials price index dropped from 55 to 45. The future raw materials price index also declined, yet the future finished goods price index saw its first increase in four months.

SELECTED COMMENTS It is still very difficult to fill open positions for any type of worker from production to professional. I am seeing the same issue everywhere in our community. Having a hard time finding employees again as we ramp up for the season. Employees are sticking to a higher starting wage making it difficult to stay in budget. Raw material prices keep going up. Still having difficulty finding and retaining skilled machinists and grinders Business is going smoothly but is lackluster. Business is better than it has been since the recession started. It still looks like a very slow recovery for quite some time in the future. Domestic energy production remains strong and easily offsets the current loss of new orders with Russian producers. We are already getting 5-10% price increases for next year. I expect we will see multiple price increases in 2015. I expect a modest rise in domestic business in the 1st to 2nd quarter of next year provided energy prices do not keep trending downward.

Table 1 Summary of Tenth District Manufacturing Conditions, September 2014 September vs. August September vs. Year Ago Expected in Six Months No Diff SA No Diff No Diff SA Plant Level Indicators Increase Change Decrease Index^ Index*^ Increase Change Decrease Index^ Increase Change Decrease Index^ Index*^ Composite Index 6 6 15 18 17 Production 34 40 25 8 12 45 24 31 14 54 27 18 35 34 Volume of shipments 33 45 22 11 14 44 26 27 16 54 29 15 39 36 Volume of new orders 31 41 27 4 5 42 28 27 15 44 38 17 26 26 Backlog of orders 21 53 25-5 -6 35 40 23 12 29 57 12 17 18 Number of employees 19 69 12 7 7 35 40 24 12 30 53 15 15 13 Average employee workweek 18 66 15 4 2 15 62 22-6 17 71 11 6 4 Prices received for finished product 12 79 7 5 2 44 44 10 34 35 54 8 26 26 Prices paid for raw materials 25 64 6 19 20 56 29 12 45 47 40 9 38 39 Capital expenditures 35 46 17 17 32 53 12 20 20 New orders for exports 10 72 11-1 -1 15 59 15 0 10 71 9 1 0 Supplier delivery time 13 83 3 10 8 16 77 5 12 12 85 2 10 11 Inventories: Materials 22 56 20 2 0 39 41 17 22 23 56 17 5 2 Finished goods 20 57 17 3 3 27 47 19 8 22 56 14 8 6 *Percentage may not add to 100 due to rounding ^Diffusion Index. The diffusion index is calculated as the percentage of total respondents reporting increases minus the percentage reporting declines. *^Seasonally Adjusted Diffusion Index. The month vs. month and expected-in-six-months diffusion indexes are seasonally adjusted using Census X-12. Note: The September survey included 110 responses from plants in Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Wyoming, northern New Mexico, and western Missouri. 12 Index Composite Index vs. a Month Ago Index 10 8 6 4 2 0-2 -4 Sep-13 Oct-13 Nov-13 Dec-13 Jan-14 Feb-14 Mar-14 Apr-14 May-14 Jun-14 Jul-14 Aug-14 Sep-14

Table2 Historical Manufacturing Survey Indexes Sep'13 Oct'13 Nov'13 Dec'13 Jan'14 Feb'14 Mar'14 Apr'14 May'14 Jun'14 Jul'14 Aug'14 Sep'14 Versus a Month Ago (seasonally adjusted) Composite Index 2 6 6-3 5 4 10 7 10 6 9 3 6 Production 4 11 9-13 -8 3 22 12 14 2 11 4 12 Volume of shipments 6 11 3-10 3 10 16 14 5 2 14 2 14 Volume of new orders 7 4 14 1 5 5 13 9 11 8 12 6 5 Backlog of orders -2-2 12-5 -1-4 -1 4 0 9-6 -5-6 Number of employees 0-1 4 0 11 3 0 3 10 1 8-4 7 Average employee workweek -4 1 3-2 -6 1 3 6 14 7-3 -1 2 Prices received for finished product 4 8 7 2 8 7 10 2 14 2 7 6 2 Prices paid for raw materials 15 26 16 15 19 16 16 21 28 25 19 20 20 Capital expenditures n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a New orders for exports -6-1 -3-6 4-1 6 0-3 -11-6 -7-1 Supplier delivery time 0 4-1 -2 9 0 5 11 5 10 5 4 8 Inventories: Materials -1 10 3-1 6 10 8-1 11 8 9 5 0 Inventories: Finished goods 1 9-2 1 3 3 2 2 4-4 -3 9 3 Versus a Year Ago (not seasonally adjusted) Composite Index 10 7 9 3 8 8 12 14 15 15 13 13 15 Production 15 8 14-4 8 10 15 22 28 23 24 8 14 Volume of shipments 19 8 17-8 11 13 11 18 27 23 27 10 16 Volume of new orders 16 12 21 6 8 7 24 19 15 21 17 13 15 Backlog of orders 5 2 6-3 -2 0 4 20 8 13 10 3 12 Number of employees 5 4 4 7 7 7 7 7 14 12 13 11 12 Average employee workweek 2-7 4 2-8 2 0 6 4 12 5-4 -6 Prices received for finished product 40 32 32 27 36 36 39 33 37 30 37 35 34 Prices paid for raw materials 38 48 39 40 48 37 57 59 65 54 55 55 45 Capital expenditures 16 7 15 15 19 18 20 14 18 19 10 14 17 New orders for exports -5-3 3-3 3-1 6 4 3-2 -3-5 0 Supplier delivery time 5 8 5 1 8 4 5 11 11 13 11 15 12 Inventories: Materials 7 3 0 3 10 10 7 12 9 7 1 15 22 Inventories: Finished goods 13 9-2 4 8 7 6 10-1 7 0 13 8 Expected in Six Months (seasonally adjusted) Composite Index 16 8 12 15 26 11 11 21 13 12 15 17 17 Production 32 19 20 30 45 24 28 38 18 17 23 25 34 Volume of shipments 28 17 25 32 47 24 25 37 24 20 28 20 36 Volume of new orders 19 15 17 24 35 23 30 33 22 14 24 25 26 Backlog of orders 11 8 7 8 22 15 9 20 9 9 11 15 18 Number of employees 11 3 20 15 29 6 2 22 16 14 23 15 13 Average employee workweek 3-3 9 8 9-1 5 12 10 4 13 12 4 Prices received for finished product 25 24 20 18 30 25 21 31 32 28 25 21 26 Prices paid for raw materials 37 41 32 27 47 35 38 46 53 49 46 43 39 Capital expenditures 16 16 16 12 26 24 9 21 19 23 25 16 20 New orders for exports 7 5 8 2 13 5 4 7 4 6 6 9 0 Supplier delivery time 16 3 3 5 10 2 2 11 10 10 6 12 11 Inventories: Materials 1 1 1-1 9-1 -8 1 1 2-1 7 2 Inventories: Finished goods 2-2 -2-5 -1 6-5 0 2 3-2 8 6