Manufacturing sales in Canada rose 2.3 percent in December to C$53.5 billion (US$40.9 billion), following a 2.3 percent increase in November, according to Statistics Canada. The growth was mainly the result of higher sales of transportation equipment, as well as petroleum and coal products.
Sales were up in 8 of 21 industries, representing 41 percent of the manufacturing sector. Sales of durable goods rose 2.4 percent, while sales of non-durable goods increased 2.1 percent.
In constant dollars, sales were up 2.3 percent, indicating that higher volumes of manufactured goods were sold in December.
Sales of transportation equipment rose 7.4 percent in December, following two consecutive monthly decreases. Much of the increase in December was attributable to a sharp gain in sales of other transportation equipment, and to higher sales in the motor vehicle parts (+7.1 percent) and motor vehicle assembly (+2.8 percent) industries. Growth in the motor vehicle parts and motor vehicle assembly industries partly reflected higher sales in the domestic market. The increase in the transportation equipment industry accounted for 65 percent of the total gain in manufacturing sales.
Sales in the petroleum and coal products industry were up 11.6 percent, their highest level since July 2015. Growth in December was largely attributable to higher volumes at a number of refineries that resumed production following maintenance and retooling work in September and October. Petroleum product prices increased 5.4 percent in December, according to the Industrial Product Price Index.
Sales fell in 13 industries in December, with computer and electronic products manufacturing recording the sharpest decline, down 5 percent.
Sales grew in six provinces in December, but growth was concentrated in Ontario and Quebec.
Sales were up 2.3 percent in Ontario in December, the second monthly gain in a row. Growth in December was mainly attributable to a 5.9 percent rise in sales in the transportation equipment industry. Higher sales were also recorded in the petroleum and coal products, food and fabricated metal products industries. These increases were partially offset by lower sales in the computer and electronic products industry (-7.3 percent) and primary metals industry (-3.3 percent).
In Quebec, sales rose 4.1 percent in December, their highest level since July 2008. Sales increased 22.1 percent in the transportation equipment industry, accounting for more than half of the growth in the province. The petroleum and coal products industry and primary metals industry also recorded gains. These increases were partially offset by a 2 percent decline in the food industry.
Sales in Manitoba fell 4.5 percent in December, following two consecutive monthly gains. The decline was mainly attributable to lower sales of durable goods.
Inventories were down 0.3 percent in December, the third consecutive monthly decrease.
Inventories fell in 11 of the 21 industries. The aerospace products and parts industry (-4.4 percent) and the motor vehicles industry (-8.5 percent) recorded the sharpest declines. These decreases were partially offset by a 9.2 percent increase in petroleum and coal product inventories.
The inventory-to-sales ratio declined from 1.34 in November to 1.30 in December. The inventory-to-sales ratio measures the time, in months, that would be required to exhaust inventories if sales were to remain at their current level.
Unfilled orders fell 1.9 percent in December, the second consecutive monthly decline. The decrease in December was mainly due to a drop in unfilled orders in the aerospace products and parts industry, as well as the computer and electronic products industry.
These declines were partially offset by an increase in unfilled orders in the machinery industry.
New orders were down 0.6 percent in December, following three consecutive monthly gains. There was a decline in new orders in the aerospace products and parts industry, as well as the computer and electronic products industry.