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Just looked back at the March 2025 US PMI data and it's actually a pretty interesting snapshot of where the economy was heading at that time. The manufacturing side was firing on all cylinders with a 52.4 reading, while services cooled to 51.1. Pretty stark contrast when you think about it.
What caught my attention then was how the US PMI manufacturing number hit its highest level in months. Supply chains were normalizing, companies were getting solid order inflows, and inventory rebuilding was creating this nice momentum in the industrial sector. That kind of manufacturing strength usually translates to real job creation and production volume increases on the ground.
But here's where it gets interesting - the services side told a different story. At 51.1, it was still expanding technically, but the pace had definitely slowed. Consumer spending patterns were shifting, businesses were tightening their belts on discretionary spending. Since services make up over 80 percent of the US economy and employ most American workers, this moderation mattered.
The US PMI composite index came in at 51.6, so overall the economy was still in expansion mode. But that divergence between manufacturing and services was the real story. You had this interesting rebalancing happening - factory output accelerating while service sector growth was moderating.
Market-wise, this mixed picture created all kinds of reactions. Treasury yields bounced around, you saw rotation into industrial stocks while some consumer discretionary names softened. The dollar held relatively steady as traders tried to figure out what it meant for Fed policy.
Historically, these kinds of divergences between manufacturing and services don't usually last forever. They tend to show up during economic transitions - shifts in consumer behavior, inventory cycles, trade pattern changes. The data suggested the economy was rebalancing rather than heading into a downturn, but it definitely kept everyone on their toes about what would come next.
The Fed was watching this closely too. A strong manufacturing PMI could mean the industrial core was solid, potentially arguing for patience on rate cuts. But cooling services activity suggested that policy tightening was already working through the economy, hitting demand-sensitive sectors. That tension between the two readings made for a pretty nuanced policy situation.
Globally, the US PMI manufacturing strength stood out compared to weaker readings in Europe and China at that time. That relative strength could have supported US exports, particularly in advanced machinery and tech goods. Meanwhile, the softer services PMI aligned with what was happening worldwide - consumer spending on services had plateaued after the post-pandemic surge.
The broader takeaway was an economy at an inflection point. Manufacturing showing real momentum, services moderating, but the composite index still firmly in expansion territory. Whether that divergence would persist or resolve became the key question for the quarters ahead.