Consensus | Consensus Range | Actual | Previous | Revised | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Industrial Production - M/M | -0.1% | -0.8% to 0.4% | -0.7% | -0.2% | -0.6% |
Capacity Utilization Rate | 79.5% | 79.3% to 79.7% | 78.8% | 79.7% | 79.4% |
Manufacturing Output - M/M | -0.2% | -0.5% to -0.1% | -1.3% | -0.6% | -1.1% |
Highlights
Manufacturing is down 1.3 percent in December from November. Durables production is down 1.1 percent and nondurables down 1.5 percent. Production of motor vehicles and parts is down 1.0 percent in December. Excluding motor vehicles, manufacturing is down 0.7 percent month-over-month.
Mining production is down 0.9 percent in December from November. Oil and gas well drilling is 2.6 percent lower in December.
A bout of extreme cold weather in December is likely behind the 3.8 percent rise in utilities output. Electric production is up 2.9 percent in December and natural gas up 8.2 percent.
The rate of capacity utilization is down 6 tenths to 78.8 percent in December, with manufacturing 1 percentage point lower at 77.5 percent and mining down 9 tenths to 87.7 percent. Utilities capacity use is up 2.7 points to 76.8 percent.
Market Consensus Before Announcement
Definition
The index of industrial production is available nationally by market and industry groupings. The major groupings are comprised of final products (such as consumer goods, business equipment and construction supplies), intermediate products and materials. The industry groupings are manufacturing (further subdivided into durable and nondurable goods), mining and utilities. The capacity utilization rate -- reflecting the resource utilization of the nation's output facilities -- is available for the same market and industry groupings.
Industrial production was also revised to NAICS (North American Industry Classification System) in the early 2000s. Unlike other economic series that lost much historical data prior to 1992, the Federal Reserve Board was able to reconstruct historical data that go back more than 30 years.
Description
The index of industrial production shows how much factories, mines and utilities are producing. The manufacturing sector accounts for less than 20 percent of the economy, but most of its cyclical variation. Consequently, this report has a big influence on market behavior. In any given month, one can see whether capital goods or consumer goods are growing more rapidly. Are manufacturers still producing construction supplies and other materials? This detailed report shows which sectors of the economy are growing and which are not.
The capacity utilization rate provides an estimate of how much factory capacity is in use. If the utilization rate gets too high (above 85 percent), it can lead to inflationary bottlenecks in production. The Federal Reserve watches this report closely and sets interest rate policy on the basis of whether production constraints are threatening to cause inflationary pressures. As such, the bond market can be highly sensitive to changes in the capacity utilization rate. In this global environment, though, global capacity constraints may matter as much as domestic capacity constraints.
Importance
Industrial production and capacity utilization indicate not only trends in the manufacturing sector, but also whether resource utilization is strained enough to forebode inflation. Also, industrial production is an important measure of current output for the economy and helps to define turning points in the business cycle (start of recession and start of recovery).
Interpretation
The bond market will rally with slower production and a lower utilization rate. Bond prices will fall when production is robust and the capacity utilization rate suggests supply bottlenecks. Healthy production growth is bullish for the stock market only if it isn't accompanied by indications of inflationary pressures.
The production of services may have gained prominence in the United States, but the production of manufactured goods remains a key to the economic business cycle. A nation's strength is judged by its ability to produce domestically those goods demanded by its residents as well as by importers. Many services are necessities of daily life and would be purchased whether economic conditions were weak or strong. Consumer durable goods and capital equipment are more likely purchased when the economy is robust. Production of manufactured goods causes volatility in the economy. When demand for manufactured goods decreases, it leads to less production with corresponding declines in employment and income.
The three most significant sectors include motor vehicles and parts, aircraft and information technology. Volatility in any these single sectors could affect the total.
Industrial production is subject to some monthly variation. As with all economic statistics, the three-month moving average of the monthly changes or year over year percent changes provide a clearer picture of the trend in this series.