103.92
+0.10 (+0.1%)
103.92
Current Value
104.11
Period High
95.51
Period Low
101.97
Period Average

US Industrial Production Index | Manufacturing Output Tracker Trend

US Industrial Production Index | Manufacturing Output Tracker Historical Data

2021-07-01 100.07
2021-08-01 100.04
2021-09-01 99.00
2021-10-01 100.35
2021-11-01 101.27
2021-12-01 101.19
2022-01-01 101.21
2022-02-01 101.85
2022-03-01 102.67
2022-04-01 102.90
2022-05-01 102.97
2022-06-01 102.82
2022-07-01 103.05
2022-08-01 103.17
2022-09-01 103.53
2022-10-01 103.44
2022-11-01 103.11
2022-12-01 101.83
2023-01-01 102.75
2023-02-01 102.80
2023-03-01 102.81
2023-04-01 103.22
2023-05-01 102.98
2023-06-01 102.38
2023-07-01 103.07
2023-08-01 103.10
2023-09-01 103.31
2023-10-01 102.58
2023-11-01 102.89
2023-12-01 102.63
2024-01-01 101.48
2024-02-01 102.73
2024-03-01 102.52
2024-04-01 102.36
2024-05-01 102.98
2024-06-01 103.25
2024-07-01 102.52
2024-08-01 103.02
2024-09-01 102.60
2024-10-01 102.21
2024-11-01 101.95
2024-12-01 103.04
2025-01-01 102.88
2025-02-01 103.87
2025-03-01 103.64
2025-04-01 103.67
2025-05-01 103.75
2025-06-01 104.11
2025-07-01 103.82
2025-08-01 103.92
Showing 50 entries (limited to 50 most recent)

About This Data

Industrial Production Index measures the real output of manufacturing, mining, and electric/gas utilities. Uses 2017 as the base year (2017=100).

Source: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System via Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED)

Units: Index 2017=100

Frequency: Monthly, Seasonally Adjusted

Data Points: 58 observations

Date Range: 2020-10-14 to 2025-10-14

Economic Analysis

Industrial production is a key coincident economic indicator, closely correlated with GDP growth. Rising production signals economic expansion and job creation in manufacturing sectors. Declining production often precedes recessions. Particularly sensitive to business cycles and global trade conditions, making it valuable for economic forecasting.

Trading & Investment Context

Industrial production changes above 0.5% monthly often signal economic acceleration, supporting cyclical stocks and materials sectors. Consistent declines typically precede recessions, making this valuable for defensive positioning. Manufacturing-heavy regions and industrial stocks correlate strongly with this data. Options strategies around release dates can capture volatility, as production surprises often exceed expectations.

Last updated: October 14, 2025 at 8:49 PM UTC