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The US manufacturing sector gains in June

The US manufacturing sector gains in June

The U.S. factory output edged up slightly in June, as a decline of motor vehicle production was offset by gains elsewhere. Manufacturing remains constrained due to tariffs on imported goods.

The Federal Reserve announced on Wednesday that manufacturing output increased by 0.1% in June after a 0.3% rise in May which was upwardly revised. The Federal Reserve said that economists polled had predicted production to remain unchanged following a 0.1% increase in May. In June, the production at factories increased by 0.8% compared to last year.

The second quarter saw a growth of 2.1% on an annualized basis, after a 3.7% expansion in the quarter January-March.

The aggressive tariffs of President Donald Trump, including a 50 percent duty on steel and aluminium as well as 25 percent tax on motor vehicles, continue to overshadow the manufacturing sector, which represents 10.2% in the U.S.

Trump announced last week that increased duties will be in effect for imports of a variety of countries including Mexico, Japan and Canada, as well the European Union.

Trump has defended these duties, saying they are necessary to revive the U.S. industry base that had been in decline for a long time. However, economists have said this cannot be achieved within a short amount of time. They cite high production costs and labor costs among other challenges.

The output of motor vehicles and parts fell 2.6% in June after a 4.6% increase in May. The production of miscellaneous transport equipment and aerospace rose by 1.6%, while primary metals output increased by 3.1%.

Production of durable goods was unchanged. The nondurable manufacturing production rose by 0.3%. This was boosted by an increase of 2.9% in the production petroleum and coal products.

The mining output dropped by 0.3% in August after a 0.1% increase the previous month. Utilities production increased by 2.8%, as the heatwave across the country drove up demand for air conditioners. This followed a drop of 2.5% in May.

After being flat for two months in a row, the overall industrial production increased by 0.3%. On a yearly basis, industrial output increased by 0.7%. The second quarter saw a slowdown from the 4.3% growth rate of the first.

The capacity utilization rate for the industrial sector has increased from 77.5% to 77.6% in May. This is 2.0 percentage points lower than the average for 1972-2024. The manufacturing sector's operating rate increased to 76.9% in June from 76.8 percent in May. This is 1.3% below the long-term average. Lucia Mutikani, Lucia Mutikani and Mark Porter (Reporting)

(source: Reuters)