← NewsAll
Canada news is currently paused for latest updates. We'll resume retrieval when enough requests come in.
U.S. manufacturing output posts largest gain in 11 months in January
Summary
U.S. factory production rose 0.6% in January, the biggest monthly increase since February 2025, and overall industrial production advanced 0.7% as capacity use ticked higher.
Content
U.S. factory production rose 0.6% in January, the largest monthly gain since February 2025. The Federal Reserve reported the increase after output was unchanged in December. The manufacturing sector accounts for about 10.1% of the U.S. economy and has been affected by import tariffs and higher interest rates. Economists and policymakers are watching how AI-related demand and tax policy could influence future production.
Key figures:
- Manufacturing output increased 0.6% in January, the biggest monthly rise since February 2025, after being unchanged in December.
- Production at factories was up 2.4% year-over-year, and economists polled had forecast a 0.4% monthly gain.
- Durable goods output rose 0.8% with gains in nonmetallic mineral products, machinery, computer and electronic products, miscellaneous durables, and motor vehicles and parts (which rose for the first time since last August).
- Non-durable goods output rose 0.4%; mining fell 0.2%; utilities rose 2.1%; overall industrial production advanced 0.7% in January.
- Capacity utilization for the industrial sector increased to 76.2% from 75.7%, and the manufacturing operating rate rose to 75.6%, both remaining below long-run averages.
Summary:
The January rise represents a modest recovery across multiple factory categories and has prompted economists to note potential support from AI-driven demand and tax changes. The sector continues to face headwinds from import tariffs and higher interest rates, and manufacturing lost more than 80,000 jobs in 2025; Undetermined at this time.
