U.S. industrial production rose 1.1% in October, recovering much of the spring decline caused by the virus pandemic
By MATT OTT AP Business Writer
November 17, 2020, 2:44 PM
• 2 min read
Share to FacebookShare to TwitterEmail this articleSILVER SPRING, Md. -- U.S. industrial production rose 1.1% in October, recovering much of the spring decline caused by the virus pandemic.
It was a rebound after a downturn in September, but production still remains below pre-pandemic levels, the Federal Reserve reported Tuesday. The rise was slightly better than the 1% analysts were expecting and combined with an upward revision in September's number, has to be seen as good news as coronavirus cases spike across the U.S. and states re-instate restrictions.
It's unclear what manufacturers will face in the coming months, but a sudden decline in demand, possibly combined with government-imposed restrictions on their operations due to the virus, could severely dampen industrial output.
A key category that reflects manufacturing output rose 1%, but is still about 5% below its level in February before the coronavirus outbreak swept through the U.S., closing businesses, factories and schools.
In October, industry operated at 72.8% of capacity, down from a reading of 77% of capacity a year ago.
Utilities' output rose 3.9 percent, but output at mines fell 0.6 percent and is now 14.4 percent below where it was this time last year.
September's number was revised upward from -0.6% to -0.4%. It remains the only decline since April's 12.7% drop.