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June 25, 2020

The El Paso economy rebounded somewhat in May as many indicators turned around following a historical retrenchment in April due to
COVID-19 measures. El Paso’s business-cycle index ticked upward, monthly employment rose and the unemployment rate dipped. El Pasoans
began to leave their homes more frequently in May and gradually returned to work, and this trend continued through late June. U.S. industrial
production continued to weaken in May. Mexico’s industrial activity also declined sharply in April. U.S. auto sales and production figures
reversed their downward course from April to May but remained depressed.

Business-Cycle Index
The El Paso Business-Cycle Index grew an annualized 19.4 percent from April to May (Chart 1). Improvement in the index was due to a reduction
in the unemployment rate and an upturn in monthly employment numbers.

Labor Market
Employment rebounded in May, with El Paso adding a net 8,508 jobs (42.0 percent annualized, or a 3.0 percent nonannualized increase) due to
gains in the leisure and hospitality (5,524 jobs), other services (2,375 jobs), education and health services (1,532 jobs) and trade, transportation
and utilities sectors (1,047 jobs). However, payroll employment remained negative on a year-to-date basis in May (Chart 2). Since the beginning
of the year, the metro has lost 31,395 jobs (-21.5 percent annualized, or -9.6 percent nonannualized), or 9.4 percent of the labor force. While all
sectors posted job declines, leisure and hospitality saw the largest drop, losing 15,113 jobs (-70.0 percent annualized, or -39.5 percent
nonannualized). Job losses were also prevalent in the professional and business services; trade, transportation and utilities; manufacturing;
and construction sectors.

Although still elevated, El Paso’s unemployment rate dropped from 14.3 percent in April to 13.5 percent in May. The Texas and U.S.
unemployment rates also fell, from 13.5 percent to 13.0 percent and 14.7 percent to 13.3 percent, respectively.

Mobility and Engagement Indexes and COVID-19 Deaths
Social-distancing measures helped flatten the curve of COVID-19-related deaths in April. Cumulative deaths per 100,000 residents in mid-April
in the El Paso metro area and in Texas were 0.2 and 0.9, respectively. By June 23, deaths per 100,000 residents rose to 14.5 in El Paso and 7.7 in
Texas (Chart 3). These data are subject to adjustments.

The Dallas Fed’s Mobility and Engagement Indexes (MEIs) for El Paso and Texas bottomed out April 11 and have trended upward since. This was
driven by people leaving their home more often, traveling further distances from their homes and staying at those other locations longer as
stay-at-home orders were lifted and the economy partially reopened. The El Paso MEI was 64.6 percent higher for the week ending June 20
compared with April 11, while the Texas MEI was 55.0 percent higher over the same period.

El Paso Trade
Annualized total trade in El Paso fell to a 24-year low of $11.3 billion in April, an 85.7 percent reduction from the year prior. The drop in total
trade was driven by declines of 95.3 percent in imports and 71.7 percent in exports. Imports totaled an annualized $2.2 billion in April, while
exports equaled $9.1 billion (Chart 4).

U.S. and Mexico Industrial Production

U.S. industrial production fell 15.3 percent year over year in May (Chart 5). Mexico’s industrial production index fell in April by a much larger
magnitude, declining 29.6 percent from a year prior. The Institute for Supply Management manufacturing index ticked up from 41.5 in April to
43.1 in May. The direction of the index reversed after April’s contraction as many manufacturers and suppliers returned to work in late May.
Panelists’ near-term outlooks were cautious due to demand uncertainty caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. U.S. and Mexican production and
manufacturing trends are important to the local economy because of cross-border manufacturing relationships.

U.S. auto and light-truck production was 2.9 million units in May—2.8 million more than in April. However, May’s production was 75.3 percent
below that in May 2019. Meanwhile, monthly auto sales totaled 12.3 million in May, 37.8 percent higher than in April, but 29.7 percent below
sales of 17.5 million a year prior. Auto sales are closely linked to the local economy because roughly half of maquiladoras in Juárez are auto
related.

NOTE: Data may not match previously published numbers due to revisions. The El Paso metropolitan statistical area includes El Paso and
Hudspeth counties.

About El Paso Economic Indicators
Questions can be addressed to Keighton Allen at keighton.allen@dal.frb.org. El Paso Economic Indicators is released on the fourth Wednesday
of every month.