(Bloomberg) -- U.S. factory production expanded in October for a fifth straight month, the longest streak since 2011 and indicating a solid start to the fourth quarter, Federal Reserve data showed Friday.
Manufacturing output rose 0.3 percent after an upwardly revised 0.3 percent gain in the prior month. Economists had projected a median increase of 0.2 percent. Total industrial production, which also includes mining and utilities, increased a below-forecast 0.1 percent, reflecting declines in those sectors.
Key Insights- Factory output continued to grow at a solid clip, supported by a range of sectors including metals, machinery, aerospace and furniture.
- While buoyant consumer demand and this year's corporate tax cuts have helped boost production, the sector faces headwinds including higher costs for materials and supply constraints partly linked to the trade war with China.
- The industrial production figures reflect a 0.5 percent decline in utility output, the biggest drop since June, and a 0.3 percent decrease in mining, the largest decline since January.
- Hurricanes Florence and Michael, which made landfall in September and October respectively, lowered industrial production during the two months, “but their effects appear to be less than 0.1 percent per month,” the Fed said.
- Capacity utilization, measuring the amount of a plant that's in use, eased to 78.4 percent from an upwardly revised 78.5 percent in the prior two months, the highest since January 2015. That compares with the long-run average of 79.8 percent.
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