Chicago Fed Index Rises 0.5% in Oct. to 82.9

The Chicago Fed Midwest Manufacturing Index climbed 0.5% in October to a seasonally adjusted level of 82.9 after the September report showed a revised 0.7% increase to 82.5, originally reported as a 1.0% rise to 82.3, the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago reported yesterday.

Nationally, the Federal Reserve Board’s industrial production index for manufacturing slid 0.1% in October.

Overall manufacturing output in the region dropped 13.6% from a year earlier, compared to a 7.5% decline in output nationally in that period.

The regional auto sector’s output grew 0.8% in the month, after a 4.6% rise in September, while national output was down 0.8%.

Nationally, auto sector output dropped 3.9% from a year ago, while the Midwest auto sector’s output slumped 11.7% year-over-year, according to the Fed.

The regional steel sector’s output increased 0.8% in October following a 1.4% gain in September. Nationally, steel sector output was up 0.5% in the month. On a year-over-year basis, steel output fell 27.2% in the region while falling 17.9% in the nation. 

The regional machinery sector’s output gained 0.7% in October, following a 1.6% decrease the month before. Nationally, machinery sector output slipped 0.4%. On a year-over-year basis, machinery output slid 22.9% in the region while falling 11.6% in the nation.

The regional resource sector’s output rose 0.3% in October, following a flat September. Nationally, resource output was up 0.3% in the month.

Compared to October 2008, regional resource output was 3.5% worse while national resource output fell 2.0%.

“Three of the five subsectors of the regional resource sector — paper, food, and chemical production — increased from September to October, while nonmetallic mineral and wood production decreased,” the Fed said.

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