The Empire State Manufacturing Survey indicates that conditions for New York manufacturers continued to improve in August. The general business conditions index held steady at 25.1.
The new orders and shipments indexes remained at similarly high levels, while the unfilled orders index continued to hover near zero. The prices paid index also remained essentially unchanged, while the prices received index fell to its lowest level in two years. Employment indexes were positive and above their July readings. Future indexes conveyed steady optimism, although the future shipments index turned sharply lower. While positive, future price indexes fell, as did the capital spending and technology spending indexes.
Here's the accompanying chart.
From the Federal Reserve:
Industrial production rose 0.3 percent in July after an increase of 0.6 percent in June. At 113.9 percent of its 2002 average, total industrial production in July was 1.4 percent above its year-earlier level. In July, manufacturing output moved up 0.6 percent and mining output advanced 0.7 percent, but the output of utilities fell 2.1 percent. Capacity utilization for total industry edged up to 81.9 percent, a rate 0.5 percentage point below the level in July 2006 but 0.9 percentage point above its 1972-2006 average.
....
Manufacturing output rose 0.6 percent in July, as production of both durable and nondurable goods increased. The increase in manufacturing followed a similarly sized gain in June. The production of durable goods rose 0.9 percent in July, and gains were widespread across components. The production of nondurable goods rose 0.3 percent, after a gain of 0.4 percent in June. Substantial advances in July occurred in paper, petroleum and coal products, and chemicals. However, the output indexes for textile and product mills, apparel and leather products, and plastics and rubber products all declined. The output of the non-NAICS manufacturing industries (logging and publishing) rose 0.8 percent. The factory operating rate advanced 0.3 percentage point, to 80.7 percent, a rate about 1 percentage point above its 1972-2006 average.
However, the year-over-year change has been declining for a bit:
Both of these are welcome reports considering the overall market tenor of the last 3-4 weeks. Manufacturing continues to be a bright spot in the economy. My guess is the very low position of the dollar has a lot to do with this.