Canada Manufacturing sales 0.7% versus 0.7% expected

Prior month 0.2%Canadian manufacturing sales rose by 0.7% to $71.6 billion in February. The estimate was 0.7%Increases were seen in 13 out of 21 subsectors, largely fueled by:Petroleum and coal products, which went up by 4.3%.Electrical equipment, appliance, and component products, which saw a 12.6% increase.The chemical subsector experienced the most significant decline, with sales dropping by 5.5%.Sales in constant dollars showed a marginal increase of 0.1%.The Industrial Product Price Index also increased by 0.7%.Inventory data:Total inventories in Canada decreased by 0.7% to $120.6 billion in February, marking the third consecutive monthly decline.The decrease was primarily due to lower goods in process inventories (-1.8%) and raw materials inventories (-0.5%).Significant reductions in inventories were noted in the chemicals (-5.5%) and petroleum and coal products (-2.7%) sectors.In constant dollars, total inventories saw a decline of 0.8%.The inventory-to-sales ratio decreased from 1.71 in January to 1.68 in February, indicating a quicker turnover of inventory relative to sales.Additional related developments:Unfilled orders in the manufacturing sector increased by 0.8% to $105.1 billion, with aerospace products and parts orders up by 1.2%.The capacity utilization rate for the manufacturing sector rose from 77.0% in January to 78.1% in February.There were increases in capacity utilization in the machinery (+2.3 percentage points), transportation equipment (+1.5 percentage points), and food (+1.8 percentage points) subsectors.These gains were partly offset by decreases in the primary metal (-1.0 percentage points) and paper product (-1.9 percentage points) subsectors This article was written by Greg Michalowski at www.forexlive.com.

Canada Manufacturing sales 0.7% versus 0.7% expected
  • Prior month 0.2%
  • Canadian manufacturing sales rose by 0.7% to $71.6 billion in February. The estimate was 0.7%
  • Increases were seen in 13 out of 21 subsectors, largely fueled by:
    • Petroleum and coal products, which went up by 4.3%.
    • Electrical equipment, appliance, and component products, which saw a 12.6% increase.
  • The chemical subsector experienced the most significant decline, with sales dropping by 5.5%.
  • Sales in constant dollars showed a marginal increase of 0.1%.
  • The Industrial Product Price Index also increased by 0.7%.

Inventory data:

  • Total inventories in Canada decreased by 0.7% to $120.6 billion in February, marking the third consecutive monthly decline.
  • The decrease was primarily due to lower goods in process inventories (-1.8%) and raw materials inventories (-0.5%).
  • Significant reductions in inventories were noted in the chemicals (-5.5%) and petroleum and coal products (-2.7%) sectors.
  • In constant dollars, total inventories saw a decline of 0.8%.
  • The inventory-to-sales ratio decreased from 1.71 in January to 1.68 in February, indicating a quicker turnover of inventory relative to sales.

Additional related developments:

  • Unfilled orders in the manufacturing sector increased by 0.8% to $105.1 billion, with aerospace products and parts orders up by 1.2%.
  • The capacity utilization rate for the manufacturing sector rose from 77.0% in January to 78.1% in February.
  • There were increases in capacity utilization in the machinery (+2.3 percentage points), transportation equipment (+1.5 percentage points), and food (+1.8 percentage points) subsectors.
  • These gains were partly offset by decreases in the primary metal (-1.0 percentage points) and paper product (-1.9 percentage points) subsectors
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at www.forexlive.com.