Industrial Production Rose 0.7% in July
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Implications:  Industrial production surged in July at the fastest pace since 2014, extending June's gain and demonstrating strength in a sector that has begun to find its footing.  While the headline number is still down 0.6% from a year ago, it is up 0.8% at an annual rate in the past six months and up at a 3.9% annual rate in the past three months, an acceleration that signals the sector may be leaving behind the headwinds related to the drop in oil prices in the past couple of years.  This is reinforced by July's gain being broad-based, with every major headline number showing expansion.  We like to follow non-auto manufacturing, which strips out the most volatile sectors, and that rose 0.4% in July, the best growth since 2014.  Meanwhile, the more volatile sectors added to industrial growth in July.  Auto production increased 1.9% on top of a sharp 5.2% increase in June, hitting a new all-time record high.  Utility output jumped 2.1%, reflecting unusually warm July weather in the lower 48 states.  Perhaps the best news was that mining production jumped 0.7% in July, and is now up at a 4.7% annual rate in the past three months.  This month's gain was driven primarily by coal mining, however, oil and gas well drilling jumped 4.9% as well, the largest monthly gain since 2010. While mining (and energy in general) has been a drag on production over the past year, we expect activity in that sector to stabilize and even grow in the months ahead as energy prices are well off the lows from earlier this year.  Based on other commodity prices, oil prices should average at higher levels over the next several years.  Although we don't expect overall industrial production to boom any time soon – weak overseas economies will continue to be a headwind – we do expect solid growth in the year ahead.  In other recent news, the Empire State index, a measure of manufacturing sentiment in New York, fell to -4.2 in August from +0.5 in July, signaling that the improvement in the factory sector will not be a straight line.  That's what we should expect in Plow Horse Economy. 

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Posted on Tuesday, August 16, 2016 @ 12:00 PM

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