Chattanooga Times Free Press

Factory output climbed in July, lifted by auto production

- BY JOSH BOAK

WASHINGTON — Auto plants, clothing makers and plastics factories drove a sharp rebound in U.S. manufactur­ing in July.

U. S. factory production climbed 0.8 percent last month after revisions showed that output had dipped 0.3 percent in June, the Federal Reserve said Friday. The gains suggested that manufactur­ers are adjusting to the obstacles of a stronger dollar, tepid economic growth abroad and lower oil prices, which have led energy companies to slash their orders for equipment and pipelines.

Much of the improvemen­t came from motor vehicle output, which surged 10.6 percent in July. Auto sales jumped 5 percent to 1.5 million, with luxury brands such as Acura, Audi, Infiniti, Lincoln and Volvo accounting for the biggest gains.

Output at clothing and leather factories rose 1 percent last month, as did the manufactur­ing of plastics and rubber products. Some of those gains were offset by reduced output by oil and coal ref iners, as well as by a drop in productivi­ty at machinery plants.

Over the past 12 months, manufactur­ing output has risen 1.5 percent.

The Federal Reserve said overall industrial production — which includes not only the key category of manufactur­ing but also mining and utility output — rose 0.6 percent. Mining, which includes oil and gas wells, rose 0.2 percent last month but remains down 2 percent over the past 12 months. Utility output, which often fluctuates sharply from month to month depending on weather, fell 1 percent.

Factories have been battered for much of 2015. Winter storms slowed and even stopped some assembly lines in January and February.

The slowdown extended into spring. Orders for equipment and machinery were hurt by the rising value of the dollar, which makes U. S. goods more expensive overseas and depressed exports. Lower oil prices, which slowed orders from energy firms, also reduced output.

The dollar has risen about 20 percent against a basket of foreign currencies in the past 12 months, according to the Fed.

Crude oil price s , which were around $ 60 per barrel in the spring, fell close to $ 41 in early trading Friday, levels not seen since the global financial crisis. The decline has forced energy firms to curtail drilling, eliminatin­g much of the need for new pipelines and equipment that had boosted factory orders in years when prices were closer to $ 100 a barrel.

Still, the Fed report suggested factories are adapting to these headwinds. Other indicators also indicate that manufactur­ers are slowly boosting output and could contribute to a stronger economy later this year.

Factory orders rose 1.8 percent in June, the government reported earlier this month. Much of the gains came from surging demand for commercial aircraft, a volatile sector that can vary widely from month to month.

A key category that serves as a proxy for business investment plans edged up 0.7 percent after declines in April and May. For the first half of the year, this category has declined 3.5 percent from the same period a year ago and has slowed overall economic growth.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A worker helps assemble a helicopter at the AgustaWest­land’s aircraft manufactur­ing facility in Philadelph­ia.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO A worker helps assemble a helicopter at the AgustaWest­land’s aircraft manufactur­ing facility in Philadelph­ia.

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