Factory Production in US Rises for Fourth Time in Five Months

Factory Production in US Rises for Fourth Time in Five Months

Feb. 15, 2017
Healthy consumer spending and a recovery in the oil sector have supported recent gains in manufacturing.

U.S. factory output increased for the fourth time in five months amid gains in machinery and chemicals, extending a gradual recovery in manufacturing.

Production at factories, which make up about 80% of all output, increased 0.2% in January from the previous month, a Federal Reserve report showed on February 15. 

Total industrial output, which includes mining and utilities, fell 0.3% as warm weather reduced demand for heating, with utility production falling the most in 11 years.

Healthy consumer spending and a recovery in the oil sector have supported recent gains in manufacturing, with a key gauge of industry rising last month to the highest since November 2014.

At the same time, modest overseas demand, a strong U.S. dollar and soft investment in equipment from domestic firms have made for slow progress.

Estimates in the Bloomberg survey for manufacturing output, which accounts for about 12% of the economy, ranged from a decline of 0.1% to an increase of 0.6%. The previous month’s reading of a 0.2% gain was unrevised.

For total industrial production, the Bloomberg survey showed estimates ranging from a 0.6% drop to a rise of 0.4%, with a median projection for no change.

Capacity utilization, which measures the amount of a plant that is in use, declined to 75.3% in January from a revised 75.6% the prior month.

Utility Output

Utility output dropped 5.7%, the most since January 2006, after December’s 5.1% gain. Last month was the 18th-warmest January in the last 123 years, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Mining production, including oil drilling, expanded 2.8% in January after a 1.4% drop. Drilling of oil and gas wells jumped 8.5%.

U.S. rig counts increased to 741 in the week ended Feb. 10, the highest in more than a year, helped by increasing energy prices, Baker Hughes Inc. data show.

Machinery output rose 0.9%, while chemical production rose 1%. Consumer durable-goods output fell 0.9% last month on a 2.8% drop in automotive production. Business equipment production ticked up 0.1 percent following a 0.8% increase.

By Patricia Laya

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Bloomberg

Licensed content from Bloomberg, copyright 2016.

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