Texas Factory Gauge Slips Deeper Into Contraction, Even as Production Surges
The Dallas Fed’s manufacturing business index fell to -10.4 in November from -5.0, signaling a deeper contraction in overall activity across Texas. Under the hood, however, operating metrics improved sharply, with production, orders, and capacity utilization all accelerating—painting a mixed picture for risk appetite and monetary-policy expectations.
Texas Manufacturing Outlook: Sentiment Weak, Activity Stronger
– General business activity: -10.4 vs. -5.0 prior, indicating a broader deterioration in sentiment. – Production: up 15 points to 20.5, a strong pickup in output. – New orders: turned positive at 4.8 from -1.7, suggesting improving demand. – Capacity utilization: jumped 21 points to 19.4, signifying better plant use. – Shipments: rose 9 points to 15.1, pointing to faster throughput.
The diverging signals—contracting headline sentiment alongside improving production metrics—underscore an uneven manufacturing backdrop. For markets, the mix complicates the read-through on growth momentum and could keep positioning cautious ahead of upcoming national manufacturing prints and key inflation data. The underlying firmness in price indices also suggests sticky cost pressures, a factor that may influence front-end yield dynamics.
Labor and Hours: Flat Headcount, Longer Workweeks
– Employment index: unchanged at 1.2, indicating flat headcount overall. About 17% of firms reported hiring and 16% layoffs. – Hours worked: climbed 15 points to 9.9, signaling longer workweeks and tighter utilization of existing staff.
Prices and Compensation: Cost Pressures Edge Higher
– Raw materials prices: 35.3, slightly higher, indicating ongoing input-cost inflation. – Finished goods prices: 10.8, up from 7.7, hinting at increased pricing power passing through to customers. – Wages and benefits: 15.4, steady and below average, suggesting compensation growth remains contained relative to historical norms.
Forward Look: Confidence Firms Despite Current Headwinds
Six-month expectations improved across most forward-looking indicators: – Future production: surged to 33.7 from 21.0. – Future general business activity: edged up to 11.0. – Broader optimism: most expectations gauges strengthened, pointing to a modestly better growth outlook into mid-2026.
Market Perspective
For FX and rates, the split message may dampen directional conviction in the near term. A softer headline could weigh modestly on USD tactically, but firmer price indices and improved order flow argue against an outright dovish pivot in policy expectations. Equity risk appetite may stay selective as investors parse whether improving factory throughput can offset weak headline sentiment and persistent input costs. Liquidity flows are likely to concentrate around upcoming national ISM readings and PCE inflation for a clearer signal on the Fed’s reaction function.
Market Highlights – Dallas Fed general business activity: -10.4 (from -5.0) – Production: 20.5 (+15pts); New orders: 4.8 (from -1.7) – Capacity utilization: 19.4 (+21pts); Shipments: 15.1 (+9pts) – Employment: 1.2 (flat); Hours worked: 9.9 (+15pts) – Raw materials prices: 35.3; Finished goods prices: 10.8; Wages/benefits: 15.4 – Future production: 33.7; Future general business activity: 11.0
What is the Dallas Fed manufacturing index? It’s a diffusion index from the Texas Manufacturing Outlook Survey that measures changes in general business conditions. Readings below zero indicate contraction; above zero indicate expansion.
Why did the headline fall while production improved? The headline captures broad business conditions and sentiment, which can diverge from firm-level operating metrics. November showed stronger output and orders but weaker overall sentiment, reflecting caution around costs, demand visibility, or policy uncertainty.
Does this change the Fed outlook? On its own, not materially. The report shows mixed growth signals with some inflation stickiness. Markets will look to national ISM and PCE inflation to recalibrate rate expectations.
How might markets react? In the absence of major surprises elsewhere, rates and FX may trade the mixed signal cautiously—headline weakness vs. stronger internals and firm price indices—keeping volatility anchored until the next round of high-impact data, BPayNews notes.





