U.S. Industrial Production Picked Up Again in June
July 15 2020 - 10:19AM
Dow Jones News
By David Harrison
U.S. manufacturing increased in June for the second straight
month, a sign of economic recovery in the weeks before the recent
surge in coronavirus cases.
Industrial production -- a measure of output at factories, mines
and utilities -- rose a seasonally adjusted 5.4% in June from May,
the Federal Reserve said Wednesday. That was a bigger increase than
the 4% rise anticipated by economists surveyed by The Wall Street
Journal.
The index for May was unrevised at 1.4% while the index for
April was revised down to a 12.7% drop from a 12.5% drop.
The data suggest U.S. industries have started a slow recovery
from April's record decline. Despite the recent gains, the index
for the second quarter as a whole fell at an annual rate of 42.6%,
the largest quarterly decrease since World War II.
It isn't yet clear how the recent uptick in new coronavirus
cases will affect output in the coming months.
June's rebound was led by the manufacturing sector, the biggest
component of industrial production, which posted a 7.2% gain,
driven by production of autos and parts. Mining output decreased
2.9% and utilities output rose 4.2%, the Fed said.
Capacity utilization, a measure of slack in the industrial
economy, also rose more than expected to 68.6% in June from a
revised 65.1% in May, the Fed said. Economists surveyed by the
Journal had expected capacity utilization to reach 67.5% last
month.
Write to David Harrison at david.harrison@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
July 15, 2020 10:04 ET (14:04 GMT)
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