WASHINGTON—American industry rebounded last month as the United States recovered from an unusually frigid February.
Industrial production—including output at factories, mines and utilities—rose 1.4 percent in March, reversing a 2.6 percent drop in February, the Federal Reserve reported Thursday. The increase was about half the surge economists had expected as federal aid flows into the economy and the rollout of vaccines encourages a return to normal business activity. Output was limited by disruptions in the supplies of key components.
“Clearly there is lots of demand out there,” Jennifer Lee, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets, said in a research note. “It is up to manufacturers to pull up their socks and meet the demand.'’
Output rose 2.7 percent at factories. Auto production increased 2.8 percent last month after plunging 10 percent in February. Automakers were constrained for the past two months by a shortage of computer chips. Production climbed 5.7 percent at mines on a jump in output by oil and gas producers.
Utility production plunged 11.4 percent, biggest drop in records going back to 1972, as the weather warmed in March and Americans turned down the heat.
U.S. factories, mines, and utilities were running at 74.4 percent of capacity last month, up from 73.4 percent in February but well below the 1972-2020 average of 79.6 percent.
American industry has largely proven resilient through the coronavirus crisis, which hit the economy in March 2020. Industrial production was up 1 percent last month from a year earlier.
The Institute for Supply Management, an association of purchasing managers, reported earlier this month that U.S. factories expanded in March at the fastest pace in 37 years.