Industrial production falls 0.2% in September
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Implications:  Production in the US industrial sector declined in September, the first negative reading for any month since the recession ended in June 2009.  However, this is not a sign of a double-dip recession.  Unusually mild weather in September for much of the country pushed down utility production by 1.9%.  And while manufacturing dipped 0.1% in September, it was up 0.1% when you include upward revisions to previous months.  We anticipate a rebound in factory output next month.  Although capacity utilization in the industrial sector is at 74.7% -- versus a long-term average of 80% -- capacity use is well above the low of 68.2% at the bottom of the recession in mid-2009.  The rise in capacity utilization over the last 15 months is in part due to the economic revival, but also because of falling capacity in the industrial sector.  As a result of a depreciating capital stock, capacity use could be back to the long-term average of 80% by next year.  In turn, this gives companies the motive to buy more equipment.  Meanwhile, corporate profits and cash on the balance sheet (earning essentially 0% interest) are near record highs, meaning companies have the wherewithal to buy more equipment as well.

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Posted on Monday, October 18, 2010 @ 10:47 AM

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