US Manufacturers to Temper Investment Pace After Vibrant 2023

Capital spending by US manufacturers will probably cool in 2024 after a banner year of investment in plants as still-elevated borrowing costs and demand concerns temper a lingering desire to upgrade operations.

Purchasing and supply executives expect outlays to increase almost 12% this year after rising by nearly 15% in 2023, according to the Institute for Supply Management’s latest semiannual economic forecast. While factories are dialing back the pace of investment, S&P Global Market Intelligence sees spending in the sector still climbing $54 billion after an estimated $50.6 billion last year.

Investment by manufacturers in plants and other production facilities surged almost 63% in 2023, the largest annual advance since 1951, according to the government’s latest report on gross domestic product. The increase has its roots in companies taking advantage of federal incentives and making up for deferred spending during the pandemic when supply chains were in disarray.

Producers are reshoring production, plus they’re upgrading technology and pursuing productivity-enhancing technologies such as automation and artificial intelligence, said Timothy Fiore, chair of the ISM Manufacturing Business Survey Committee.

US Manufacturers Capital Expenditures Increasing

Yet economists project overall US economic growth to slow this year — averaging 1.5% compared with 2.5% in 2023, according to the latest Bloomberg monthly survey.