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WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. factories produced less in May than April, as automakers cut back on output for the first time in six months. The report indicates that manufacturing, a key driver of the economic growth, is slowing.

The Federal Reserve said today that factory output declined 0.4 percent last month, after increasing 0.7 percent in April. Auto production fell 1.5 percent, the first drop since November. Auto sales rose sharply earlier this year but slowed in May.

Overall industrial production, which includes mines and utilities, dipped 0.1 percent, after a solid 1 percent rise in April. Both mines and utilities increased production.

Separately, a survey of manufacturers showed that factory activity in the New York region grew much more slowly in June than in May. The New York Federal Reserve Bank’s Empire State index fell sharply to 2.3, from 17.1 in May. That means factories barely expanded this month. A reading below zero indicated contraction.

A measure of new orders in the Empire State survey also fell.

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Consumers are spending less and businesses are purchasing fewer large capital goods, such as machinery and computers. That’s reducing demand for factory goods.

Retail sales dipped in May for the second straight month, the government said Wednesday. It was the first back-to-back drop in two years.

And orders from businesses for machinery, computers and other capital equipment fell in April and March, according to a report released earlier this month.



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