Metalworking Activity Continues its Roller Coaster Year of Contraction
October marks a full year of metalworking activity contracting, barring just one isolated month of reprieve in February.
Share




Metalworking activity still contracted in October, closing at 45.4, one-half the distance to a recent high in August (46.0) and slightly up from September’s 44.8.
October marks metalworking activity contracting for a full year now, barring just one isolated month of reprieve in February 2023 (flat index = 50). Almost all components contracted again in October, with most of them stabilizing relative to September. Supplier deliveries is the one holdout, but trends suggest it is headed for contraction as well. While still contracting, new orders saw a slight uptick in October which may be related to employment stabilizing, while also residing in a contracting phase.
Metalworking GBI slightly bounced back again in October. Photo Credit: Gardner Intelligence
New orders posted the slightest of upticks in October despite contracting again. A third month of stable employment contraction may be a sign that shops are buying some time to see how orders shake out (3-MMA = three-month moving averages). Photo Credit: Gardner Intelligence
Related Content
-
Metalworking Contraction Slows Slightly in October
While still in a state of contraction, some indicators are improving in the metalworking market.
-
Optimism Grows as Metalworking Index Improves Again in November
A sharp increase in future business expectations underscores hopeful conditions in 2025.
-
Metalworking Activity Remained on a Path of Contraction
Steady contraction of production, new orders and backlog drove accelerated contraction in November.