3 Numbers: US Industrial Output To Rebound Modestly For September

 | Oct 17, 2016 02:13AM ET

  • New York Fed manufacturing index is on track to return to positive for October
  • US industrial activity is projected to post a modest increase in September
  • Will the 10-year Treasury yield keep rising after Yellen’s dovish inflation speech?
  • Industrial production for the US is in focus today with the government’s report for September on tap. We’ll also see October sentiment numbers for manufacturing via the New York Fed’s survey data. Meanwhile, keep an eye on the 10-year Treasury yield , which increased to a four-month high on Friday after Fed Chair Janet Yellen’s dovish speech on inflation.

    The crowd's looking for a negative 0.7% year-over-year decline in US industrial activity, quite a bit better than August’s 1.1% slide. Photo: iStock

    Federal Reserve will raise interest rates by the end of the year?

    Friday’s update on retail spending offered an optimistic spin via a solid rebound in sales. Purchases climbed 0.6% last month, the biggest monthly advance since June. But consumer sentiment sagged in October, according to The University of Michigan (UoM) preliminary estimate. But the slide may be a function of election anxiety.

    “It is likely that the uncertainty surrounding the presidential election had a negative impact [on sentiment], especially among lower-income consumers, and without that added uncertainty, the confidence measures may not have weakened,” said Richard Curtin, director of the UoM’s survey.

    Meanwhile, sentiment in the manufacturing sector revived in September. The ISM Manufacturing Index , after turning (mildly) negative in August for the first time since February, rebounded to a growth reading (above 50) last month.

    There’s also a whiff of recovery in the September data for five Federal Reserve bank sentiment indices that track the sector. Today’s first look at the October profile via the New York Fed is expected to tip the scales upward as well. Econoday.com’s consensus forecast sees the index rising to 1.0, the first positive reading in three months.