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Total
industrial
production (IP) was unchanged in May (+0.2% expected)
following a large increase in April and smaller increases in February and
March. Manufacturing output declined 0.4% in May (+0.2% expected); the index is
little changed, on net, since February. The indexes for mining and utilities
posted gains of 1.6% and 0.4%, respectively, in May. At 105.0% of its 2012
average, total industrial production in May was 2.2% above its year-earlier
level.
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Industry Groups
Manufacturing
output decreased 0.4% in May following a strong gain in April. Factory
production has increased 1.4% over the past 12 months. The index for durables
fell 0.8% in May, while the index for nondurables edged up 0.1%; the output of
other manufacturing (publishing and logging) moved up 0.3%. Almost all major
industry groups within durables posted declines (e.g., wood products: -1.4%); within nondurables, a large gain in
chemicals outweighed declines in most other industries (e.g., paper products: -0.7%).
Mining
output rose 1.6% in May. Production has increased about 1.5% per month, on
average, so far this year; the index in May was 8.3% higher than its
year-earlier level. Even so, output in May was still 10.0% below its peak in December
2014. The index for utilities advanced 0.4%, as higher output for gas utilities
more than offset a small decrease for electric utilities.
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Capacity
utilization (CU) for the industrial sector edged down 0.1 percentage point in
May to 76.6%, a rate that is 3.3 percentage points below its long-run
(1972–2016) average.
Manufacturing
CU declined 0.3 percentage point (-0.4%) in May to 75.5%, a rate that is 2.9
percentage points below its long-run average. Durables recorded a decrease in
utilization, while nondurables and other manufacturing (publishing and logging)
each posted increases (wood products: -1.4%;
paper products: -0.6%). The
operating rate for each group remained below its respective long-run average;
the greatest shortfall was for other manufacturing. Utilization for mining
moved up 1.1 percentage points to 84.3% but remained below its long-run
average. The operating rate for utilities rose 0.3 percentage point to 76.6%.
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Capacity
at the all-industries level nudged up 0.1% (+0.8% YoY) to 137.1% of 2012
output. Manufacturing (NAICS basis) inched up +0.1% (+0.8% YoY) to 137.1%. Wood products: +0.0% (+0.4% YoY) to 155.7%;
paper products: 0.0% (-1.8% YoY) to
110.2%.
The foregoing comments represent the
general economic views and analysis of Delphi Advisors, and are provided solely
for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse. They do not
constitute a solicitation or recommendation regarding any investment.
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