Thursday, May 15, 2025

Industrial and manufacturing production suggest front-running production has peaked


 - by New Deal democrat

The final datapoint for today is industrial production, including its important manufacturing component. 

Last month I wrote that “I suspect the big increases in February and March in manufacturing, like this morning’s retail sales numbers, were about front-running T—-p’s tariffs. Which means that like retail sales, production might have been pulled forward from the next few months, which may lead to whipsaw declines.”

That probably started to happen in April, as total production (blue) was unchanged, while manufacturing production (red) declined -0.4%:


But improvement continues to show on a YoY basis:



This data was partially supported by the first two regional Fed manufacturing reports for May, from New York and Philadelphia, which came in at -9.2 and -4.0, respectively. But the new orders components of both the NY and Philadelphia surveys improved, however, to +7.0 and +7.5, respectively - which were sharp improvements from -8.8 and -27.2 last month.

I think it is safe to suggest that the front-running of tariffs on the production side may have peaked; but on the other hand there is no significant evidence of contraction beyond what may be monthly noise. The expansion continues, for now.