The
Federal Reserve reported on Friday the U.S. industrial production rose 0.7
percent m-o-m in April, following a revised 2.4 percent m-o-m gain in March
(originally a 1.4 percent m-o-m advance).
Economists
had forecast industrial production would increase 1.0 percent m-o-m in April.
According
to the report, the output of utilities surged 2.6 percent m-o-m
in April, while mining production grew 0.7 percent m-o-m and manufacturing
output rose 0.4 percent m-o-m, despite a drop in motor vehicle assemblies that
principally resulted from shortages of semiconductors.
Capacity
utilization for the industrial sector increased 0.5 percentage point m-o-m to
74.9 percent in April. That was 0.1 percentage point below economists’ forecast
and 4.7 percentage points below its long-run (1972-2020) average.
In y-o-y terms, the industrial output jumped
16.5 percent in April, following an unrevised 1.0 percent increase in the prior
month, but
it was 2.7 percent below its pre-pandemic level