US:  Industrial Production ekes out modest gains in August – Wells Fargo


content provided with permission by FXStreet

US Industrial production rose 0.4% in August showed a report released on Tuesday. A rebound in utilities production offset a drop in mining activity and helped boost the headline figure, explained analysts at Wells Fargo. 

Key Quotes: 

“Industrial production increased just 0.4% in August which was a notch below the half a percent increase that had been expected. This gain, however, was enough to lift total industrial production back above its pre-pandemic, February 2020 level. Last month’s initially reported gain of 0.9% was pared to an increase of 0.8%. Supply chain problems are not improving even though demand in the factory sector remains quite strong.”

“The headline print would have been an even bigger miss had it not been for a 3.3% bounce back in utilities output after that category fell sharply in July. Mining output was the soft spot, falling 0.6% on the month. But manufacturing output was also pretty soft in August with a gain there of only 0.2%, just half the 0.4% that had been expected. That said, the Federal Reserve estimated that Hurricane Ida subtracted 0.2 percentage points from overall manufacturing output during the month.”

“The trends in production reflect what we’ve seen in spending where durable goods outlays have generally outpaced spending on shorter-lived goods primarily consumed in the service sector. Amid the pivot to services, we see scope for nondurables production to eventually outpace durables production. Still, that trend reversal may have to wait until after businesses have rebuilt depleted stockpiles. Capacity utilization for manufacturing increased 0.1 percentage point in August to 76.7%. Capacity utilization rates for all three sectors remained below their long-run averages.”