Production Weakens While Private Employment Declines

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Although not published by the federal government itself, the Fed’s measure of industrial production relies on some federal data, and thus it was not updated during the government shutdown - which means that this morning’s update is likewise stale, being for September.

Industrial production has been much less central to the US economy since the “China shock,” but it remains important for the goods producing sector. In September, headline industrial production rose 0.1%, while manufacturing production was unchanged. The above graph normalizes both measures to April 2022. As you can see, between spring 2022 and late 2024, production generally declined before surging in the first six months of this year. Total production exceeded that level just barely in July, while manufacturing production has stalled without reaching that level:
 


Here is the longer-term historical look since before the “China shock”:
 


Finally, I would be remiss without noting the poor ADP employment report for November this morning. The graph below shows industrial and manufacturing production for this year, together with the ADP employment trend and the official payroll numbers, all normalized to 100 as of April:
 


Employment has stalled since then, and production *may* have during this summer, but there have been plenty of noisy such periods before. So far consumer spending fueled by the surging stock market and the resulting “wealth effect” have more than counterbalanced that weakness.


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November ISM Manufacturing Report Indicates Deepening Stagflationary Contraction
Regional Fed Manufacturing And Services Indexes For November
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