National Post

Manufactur­ing sales slide in June: Statcan

Numbers down in 16 of 21 industries

- COLIN MCCLELLAND

• Domestic manufactur­ing sales declined in June, reflecting trade tensions and a slight rebound from large one-time deals in May, according to Statistics Canada.

Manufactur­ing sales fell 1.2 per cent to $ 58 billion in June after a 1.6- per- cent increase in May, Statcan said. Sales were down in 16 of 21 industries, representi­ng more than two-thirds of total manufactur­ing sales, according to the agency. Still, the month-to-month decline in Canadian manufactur­ing sales was better than expected by a consensus of economists forecastin­g a 1.8-per-cent drop.

The petroleum and coal product and food industries accounted for most of the month’s decline, it said.

“With recent surges in manufactur­ing shipments largely driven by one- off transactio­ns, specifical­ly in the transporta­tion equipment category, June’s pullback was to be expected,” Omar Abdelrahma­n, an economist at TD Economics in Toronto, said in a note.

“The outlook for manufactur­ing remains highly susceptibl­e to the ongoing moderation in global growth and elevated trade tensions.”

Reprisals by China, the world’s second-largest economy, after Canada detained Huawei chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou last year has snagged Canada in the middle of a U. S.- China trade war as President Donald Trump considers billions of dollars more in tariffs against the Asian nation.

For the second quarter, Canadian manufactur­ing sales rose 1.7 per cent to $ 174.5 billion, the data show. That’s a “still-healthy” amount, according to Abdelrahma­n, “but suggests soft momentum heading into the third quarter,” he said. After five consecutiv­e monthly increases, sales in the petroleum and coal product industry fell 3.8 per cent to $ 6.3 billion in June as refineries in eastern and western Canada saw lower prices depress revenue, Statscan said.

Sales of primary metals jumped 11.7 per cent in June, but were partially offset by a 5.6- per- cent decline in machinery and 2.7-per-cent fewer wood product shipments, the agency said. Durable goods rose 0.7 per cent in the month, it said.

Meantime, signs of a looming recession such as an inverted yield curve on bond rates is rattling business confidence. Despite the spectre of a looming crisis, manufactur­ing stocks fell in June, which Scotiabank says is “a welcome sign, as the elevated inventory levels prompted concerns about the durability of growth going forward.

“The manufactur­ing data received today is consistent with an expected slowdown in economy- wide activity in June, with industry- level GDP expected to be flat, leaving the Q2- 2019 now cast relatively stable at 2.78 per cent and surpassing the Bank of Canada’s latest forecast of 2.3 per cent,” wrote Nikita Perevalov, senior economist at Scotiabank.

The data show sales fell in eight of the 10 provinces with Alberta down 6.5 per cent, Newfoundla­nd & Labrador slumping 17.5 per cent, and Nova Scotia weaker by 12.1 per cent. Saskatchew­an declined six per cent and Manitoba dropped 5.8 per cent, according to Statcan.

Quebec gained the most with a one- per- cent uptick largely because of a 16.6-percent surge in primary metals, the agency said. Inventorie­s fell for the first time in seven months, down 1.5 per cent with the inventory- to- sales ratio at 1.51 compared with 1.52 in May, Statcan said.

“Forward looking indicators were disappoint­ing, with new orders down 4.2 per cent and unfilled orders down 1.2 per cent,” TD Bank said.

 ?? Jacques Boisinot / THE CANADIAN PRESS files ?? The month-to-month decline in manufactur­ing sales was
better than expected by a consensus of economists.
Jacques Boisinot / THE CANADIAN PRESS files The month-to-month decline in manufactur­ing sales was better than expected by a consensus of economists.

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