The Niagara Falls Review

Manufactur­ing sales beat forecasts in June

- ROSS MAROWITS

Canadian factory activity beat expectatio­ns in June as manufactur­ing sales fell 1.2 per cent to $58 billion, led lower by a drop in the petroleum and coal product and food industries, Statistics Canada said in a report Tuesday.

Economists on average had expected a drop of 1.7 per cent for the month, according to financial markets data firm Refinitiv.

The move lower compared with a 1.6 per cent increase in May.

CIBC Capital Markets chief economist Avery Shenfeld said the activity held up well amid a slowing industrial sector. Sales volumes fell 0.2 per cent in June after a 1.7 per cent increase a month earlier.

Sales were down in 16 of 21 industries, representi­ng 68 per cent of total manufactur­ing sales.

Sales in the petroleum and coal product industry fell 3.8 per cent to $6.3 billion in June, after five consecutiv­e monthly increases as refineries reported lower sales, due to lower prices. Food industry sales dropped 2.5 per cent to $8.7 billion in June. Paper sales were down 5.9 per cent, plastics off 3.7 per cent and chemicals decreased 2.9 per cent.

Durable goods were up 0.7 per cent. Sales of primary metals surged 11.7 per cent in June and were partially offset by a 5.6 per cent decrease in machinery and 2.7 per cent decline in wood product shipments.

“Today’s data belied the deeper retreat seen in manufactur­ed goods exports reported earlier in the month, but the slowing in global trade will at some point risk a greater decelerati­on in the factory sector,” Shenfeld wrote in a report.

“For today however, a smallertha­n-expected retreat will lean to a slightly better picture for June GDP, which is still expected to be on the soft side overall.”

Lower petroleum and coal prices contribute­d sharp pullbacks in shipments from Canada’s two main oil-producing provinces with Alberta down 6.5 per cent and Newfoundla­nd and Labrador 17.5 per cent lower.

Sales fell in eight provinces, with Nova Scotia down 12.1 per cent, Saskatchew­an decreased six per cent and Manitoba down 5.8 per cent.

Sales climbed one per cent to $14.4 billion in Quebec, mainly due to a 16.6 per cent increase in the primary metal industry and, to a lesser extent, gains in the transporta­tion equipment and petroleum and coal product industries, says StatCan.

For the second quarter, manufactur­ing sales rose 1.7 per cent to $174.5 billion. In volume terms, manufactur­ing sales increased 1.8 per cent in the quarter, mostly as a result of higher volumes sold in the petroleum and coal products industry (up 6.8 per cent) and transporta­tion equipment (2.3 per cent) higher.

June’s pullback was expected after recent increases in manufactur­ing shipments largely driven by one-off transactio­ns, said Omar Abdelrahma­n, economist for TD Economics.

“For the second quarter as a whole, manufactur­ing sales were up a still-healthy 1.7 per cent. This leaves our Q2 GDP tracking unchanged at three per cent but suggests soft momentum heading into the third quarter,” he wrote in a report.

 ?? JUSTIN TANG THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Manufactur­ing sales fell 1.2 per cent to $58 billion, led lower by a drop in the petroleum and coal product and food industries.
JUSTIN TANG THE CANADIAN PRESS Manufactur­ing sales fell 1.2 per cent to $58 billion, led lower by a drop in the petroleum and coal product and food industries.

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