U.S. Industrial Production Up Marginally in May; Manufacturing Flat
Summary
- May IP +0.1% (+1.7% y/y), third m/m increase in four months, led by a 1.3% gain in mining.
- Manufacturing unchanged (+1.4% y/y), w/ durables +0.8% and nondurables -0.9%.
- Selected high-tech +1.8%, third straight m/m rise; motor vehicles +1.2%, fifth gain in six mths.
- Utilities -0.4%, led by a 1.7% drop in electric utilities output.
- Key categories in market groups mostly up.
- Capacity utilization up to a 10-month-high 76.2%; mfg. capacity utilization steady at 75.7%.


Industrial production (IP) increased a less-than-expected 0.1% m/m in May, the third monthly gain in four months, following an upwardly revised 0.9% rise in April (+0.7% initially) and a 0.3% decline in March (unrevised), according to data from the Federal Reserve Board. A 0.3% m/m May increase had been expected in the Action Economics Forecast Survey. The year-on-year rate accelerated to 1.7% in May, the highest since January, from 1.4% in April (0.3% in May 2025). The May IP index at 102.6 was 3.3% above a low of 99.3 in November 2024 and 3.4% above a low of 99.2 in January 2024.
By industry groups, manufacturing production was essentially unchanged m/m (+1.4% y/y) in May after upwardly revised gains of 0.7% in April (+0.6% initially) and 0.2% in March (+0.1% previously). Durable goods production rose 0.8% (3.2% y/y) in May, the fourth m/m rise in five months, after a 1.1% increase in April. Within durables, almost all categories rose m/m in May, led by a 2.3% gain (-2.0% y/y) in wood products, followed by increases of 1.8% (3.1% y/y) in nonmetallic mineral products, 1.3% (4.4% y/y) in primary metals, 1.2% (-1.7% y/y) in motor vehicles & parts, 1.0% (-4.5% y/y) in furniture & related products, 0.9% (10.3% y/y) in computer & electronic products, 0.8% (2.5% y/y) in fabricated metal products, 0.5% (6.9% y/y) in aerospace & miscellaneous transportation equipment, 0.5% (2.7% y/y) in electrical equipment, appliances & components, and 0.2% (4.3% y/y) in machinery. Notably, aircraft & parts production climbed 1.1% (11.7% y/y), the fourth consecutive m/m rise, after a 2.6% April gain. Meanwhile, miscellaneous durable goods were virtually unchanged m/m (+0.9% y/y) in May following a 0.8% decline in April.
Nondurable goods production slid 0.9% (-0.6% y/y) in May, the first m/m slide since January, after a 0.3% increase in April. The May output decline was led by a 3.0% drop (-1.1% y/y) in petroleum & coal products, followed by decreases of 2.4% (-4.1% y/y) in textiles & product mills, 1.6% (-2.3% y/y) in printing & related support activities, 0.8% (0.0% y/y) in chemicals, 0.8% (-3.0% y/y) in paper, 0.5% (-0.4% y/y) in food, beverages & tobacco, and 0.3% (-0.2% y/y) in plastics & rubber products. In contrast, apparel & leather goods—the only rising category—recovered 2.4% (-0.1% y/y) in May following two successive m/m declines.
Mining activity advanced 1.3% (2.0% y/y) in May, the fourth m/m gain in five months, after a 0.2% increase in April (-0.1% initially). Utilities output, however, fell 0.4% (+3.1% y/y) following a 2.2% April rebound (+1.9% initially), reflecting a 1.7% drop (+1.8% y/y) in electric utilities output and an 8.5% rise (12.5% y/y) in natural gas utilities output.
By market groups, construction supplies production increased 1.1% (2.3% y/y) in May, up for the second time in three months, reversing a 0.3% decline in April. Business equipment output rose 0.6% (5.7% y/y), the fifth m/m rise in six months, following a 1.8% April gain. Materials production grew 0.3% (1.9% y/y), the third m/m increase in four months, after a 0.7% April rise. In contrast, consumer goods output fell 0.5% (-0.6% y/y) after a 1.2% April rebound, reflecting a 0.5% increase (-3.0% y/y) in durable consumer goods and a 0.8% decrease (+0.1% y/y) in nondurable consumer goods.
In special classifications, factory output of selected high-tech industries rose 1.8% (12.6% y/y) in May on top of an upwardly revised 2.2% rise in April (+1.0% initially)—marking the third straight m/m gain and the seventh in eight months. Manufacturing production excluding selected high-tech industries held steady m/m (+1.1% y/y) in May after a 0.7% increase in April, while manufacturing production excluding selected high-tech and motor vehicles & parts dipped 0.1% (+1.3% y/y) following a 0.5% April rise.
Capacity utilization inched up to 76.2% in May, the highest since July 2025, from 76.1% in April (unrevised). The result matched the forecast by the Action Economics Forecast Survey. The May reading was 3.2 percentage points below its long-run (1972–2025) average. Manufacturing capacity utilization held at 75.7% in May and April (75.8% previously), the highest since September 2025; the May rate was 2.5 percentage points below its long-run average.
Industrial production and capacity data are in Haver’s USECON database. Additional detail on production and capacity utilization can be found in the IP database. The expectations figures come from the AS1REPNA database.


Winnie Tapasanun
AuthorMore in Author Profile »Winnie Tapasanun has been working for Haver Analytics since 2013. She has 20+ years of working in the financial services industry. As Vice President and Economic Analyst at Globicus International, Inc., a New York-based company specializing in macroeconomics and financial markets, Winnie oversaw the company’s business operations, managed financial and economic data, and wrote daily reports on macroeconomics and financial markets. Prior to working at Globicus, she was Investment Promotion Officer at the New York Office of the Thailand Board of Investment (BOI) where she wrote monthly reports on the U.S. economic outlook, wrote reports on the outlook of key U.S. industries, and assisted investors on doing business and investment in Thailand. Prior to joining the BOI, she was Adjunct Professor teaching International Political Economy/International Relations at the City College of New York. Prior to her teaching experience at the CCNY, Winnie successfully completed internships at the United Nations. Winnie holds an MA Degree from Long Island University, New York. She also did graduate studies at Columbia University in the City of New York and doctoral requirements at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Her areas of specialization are international political economy, macroeconomics, financial markets, political economy, international relations, and business development/business strategy. Her regional specialization includes, but not limited to, Southeast Asia and East Asia. Winnie is bilingual in English and Thai with competency in French. She loves to travel (~30 countries) to better understand each country’s unique economy, fascinating culture and people as well as the global economy as a whole.





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