The U.S. manufacturing sector showed a strong recovery in January 2026, according to the latest ISMยฎ Manufacturing PMIยฎ report. The index rose to 52.6%, up 4.7 points from 47.9 in December 2025. Any reading above 50 indicates expansion, meaning that U.S. factories returned to growth for the first time in a year. Analysts estimate this rebound could support roughly a 1.7% annualized increase in GDP.
Breaking down the report, several key sub-indexes show what drove this improvement. New Orders jumped to 57.1%, the strongest growth since February 2022, signaling that businesses are seeing higher demand. Production also rose to 55.9%, indicating faster manufacturing output. However, employment remained below 50 at 48.1, meaning hiring in factories is still slightly contracting, though less sharply than before. Supplier Deliveries came in at 54.4%, suggesting that suppliers are taking longer to deliver goods, usually a sign of higher demand or logistical pressure. Inventories are contracting at 47.6%, showing that companies remain cautious about stock levels, while customersโ inventories were very low at 38.7%, which may drive more new orders.
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