Don’t Miss a Post. Subscribe now.

Industrial Production Rose 0.4 Percent in August from Negative Revisions

Industrial production rose 0.4 percent in August from a 0.3 percentage point downward revision in July. Motor vehicle production fell 5.0 percent.

Industrial production numbers from the Fed, calculation and chart by Mish.

Please consider the Fed’s Industrial Production and Capacity Utilization report for August 2023.

Industrial production increased 0.4 percent in August, and manufacturing output inched up 0.1 percent. The August reading for manufacturing was held back by a drop of 5 percent in the output of motor vehicles and parts; factory output elsewhere rose 0.6 percent. The index for mining moved up 1.4 percent, and the index for utilities climbed 0.9 percent. At 103.5 percent of its 2017 average, total industrial production in August was 0.2 percent above its year-earlier level. Capacity utilization moved up to 79.7 percent in August, in line with its long-run (1972–2022) average.

A Word About Revisions

Once again we see more negative revisions, no surprise in this corner.

Last month the Fed reported IP rose 1.0 percent in July. This month the Fed says July rose 0.7 percent.

Last month I reported Industrial Production Jumps 1 Percent From Negative Revisions, Autos Lead the Way

This month we see the 1.0 percent was really 0.7 percent. Next month we will have a much better clue what last month and this month are.

Motor Vehicles and Parts Last 3 Months

  • June: -3.9
  • July: +5.1
  • August: -5.0

The month-over-month numbers are interesting. With a then pending strike, now underway, the big three manufacturers should have been attempting to get as much production under their belts as possible. Instead there was a 5.1 percent rise in July followed by a 5.0 percent decline in August.

Have seasonal adjustments gone haywire? And what’s with that 10.4 percent jump in April?

Are the numbers this volatile or is it the Fed’s measurement that’s volatile?

Industrial Production Index

Industrial production numbers from the Fed, chart by Mish.

For all the volatility in motor vehicles and durable good, the overall IP index is quite stable. It’s gone nowhere for years but in interesting ways.

Industrial Production Index Since 1972

Industrial production numbers from the Fed, chart by Mish.

The US manufacturing IP index peaked at 106.4 in December of 2007 at the onset of the Great Recession and never recovered.

Year-over-year analysis is a good way to see where things have been going.

Industrial Production Percent Change Year-Over-Year

Industrial production numbers from the Fed, calculation and chart by Mish.

Year-Over-Year Changes

  • IP: +0.2 Percent
  • Manufacturing: -0.7 Percent
  • Durable Goods Manufacturing: -1.7 Percent
  • Motor Vehicles and Parts: +5.9 percent
  • Aircraft and Parts: +11.0 Percent

Motor vehicles has been seriously impacted by lack of parts, notably chips, and more recently a push for EVs that customers don’t seem to want.

Perhaps EVs have contributed a bit to month-over-month volatility.

More About EVs

  1. What Do MishTalk Readers Think About “Electric Vehicles for Everyone?”
  2. Rental Car EV Pains, No One in their Right Mind Wants Them Now
  3. The Shocking Truth About Biden’s Proposed Energy Fuel Standards
  4. Biden’s Green Energy Inflation Reduction Act Needs a Big Bailout Already

EVs are coming, like it or not. For those who have a charger in their home and seldom travel far, EVs make good sense.

EVs make little to no sense for vacationers, see link #2 above.

And for everyone, EVs are not going to do a damn thing for the environment. A Biden administration report makes that determination.

Buried deep on Page 56,342 of volume 88 of the Federal Register, the agency makes this concession about its latest proposed rules: “Net benefits for passenger cars remain negative across alternatives.” In plain English, this means that mandating ever-more-stringent fuel economy for passenger cars will harm society.

For discussion, please see #3 above.

Subscribe to MishTalk Email Alerts.

Subscribers get an email alert of each post as they happen. Read the ones you like and you can unsubscribe at any time.

This post originated on MishTalk.Com

Thanks for Tuning In!

Mish

Comments to this post are now closed.

9 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Kenneth Haugland
Kenneth Haugland
2 years ago

I have an Tesla Model Y with 450 km range. Had a vacation in Norway this summer and used Tesla’s charging network. Worked wonderfully, most of the times i got from 12% to 80% charge within 20 minutes (up to 160kwh in charing speed). This is not more than you need for a quick break from driving and getting some food. If you are a bit interested it works great.

Micheal Engel
2 years ago

1) IWM weekly close is the lowest close in the last 5 weeks. This week’s bar, on higher vol, is the smallest. Something is wrong. If IWM closes < Sept 21 low, the regional banks are in trouble.
2) SPX might be turning around since June 16 high. If on Sept 29 SPX closes bad things can happen.
3) Today might be a trap.

Micheal Engel
2 years ago
Reply to  Micheal Engel

If on Sept 29 SPX closes bad things can happen.

Jon
Jon
2 years ago

The Big 3 have tons of inventory on dealer lots. There’s no need to produce more right now. The problem is no one is buying there overpriced products. They’d rather have there $70k pick up truck sit on a dealer lot than produce a $35k truck that competes with their own inventory.

TT
TT
2 years ago
Reply to  Jon

what kind of nit wit buys a truck for 50k or 70k. morons. BTW MISH, COLUMBIA IS A UNIVERSITY (STUDIED THERE, NOT ENROLLED, FREE). COLOMBIA IS A COUNTRY AND COLOMBIAN IS A REEFER STRAIN.

Micheal Engel
2 years ago

Industrial production rose, but SPX closed < June 30 high.

AD
AD
2 years ago
Reply to  Micheal Engel

SPX closed at its all time high of about 4818 back around December 2021.

How long before SPX returns to 4818 ?

Mid 2024 ? So 2.5 years to recover ?

SPX has already decreased at least 20% in March 2020 and October 2022.

Are we still in the bear market that started in March 2020 ?

KGB
KGB
2 years ago

EV’s do not make good sense in Green California because electricity costs >$0.50/kWh.

Government statistics are lies. Why bother to quote them? You waste your time and mine. Railroad Time statistics are pretty good. Electric power consumption is valid. Retail tax receipts are worthwhile. Federal Income tax and social security receipts are OK. Credit card transactions.

Anything seasonally adjusted is adulterated data. Show us the original data. When the Climatologists announced global warming the physical scientists asked to see the original data and the algorithms used to massage the data. Climatologists claim they lost the original data and do not share how they fudged the data. Hoax is too kind a word for Government inflation, GNP, and global warming.

TT
TT
2 years ago
Reply to  KGB

correct. and the tried and true, check what’s in your wallet. my benjamins and shekels buy less today than 5 years and 10 years ago. inflation. nobody that wants a job out of work. no recession. now get back to work, serfs.

Decorate Your Walls with Mish Fine Art Images

Click each image to view details or purchase in the store.

Stay Informed

Subscribe to MishTalk

You will receive all messages from this feed and they will be delivered by email.