Besi-baja, batubara, timah, karet, plastik, aluminium....apalagi ya yang 
menarik buat invest?


 Oct. 17 (Bloomberg) -- Industrial production in the U.S. advanced in September 
on growing demand for automobiles and computers after stalling the prior month, 
a sign manufacturers are contributing to growth. 
 
 Output at factories, mines and utilities increased 0.2 percent, in line with 
the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey, after being little changed in 
August, figures from the Federal Reserve showed today. Factory production, 
which makes up 75 percent of the total, climbed for a third month. 
 
 Companies like General Motors Co. and Alcoa Inc. are getting a lift as Japan 
recovers from the earthquake and tsunami, and as demand from emerging markets 
and business investment boosts orders. At the same time, shipments to Europe 
may cool as the region’s debt crisis lingers, indicating factory assembly lines 
will probably not be running at full tilt. 
 
 “You can’t scare America into recession right now,” David Kelly, chief market 
strategist at JPMorgan Funds in New York, said in an interview on Bloomberg 
Television’s “In the Loop” with Betty Liu. The data “have been quite good in 
the last few weeks,” said Kelly, who projects the economy grew at least at a 2 
percent annual rate in the third quarter and possibly as much as 3 percent. 
 
 Survey Results 
 
 Estimates of the 75 economists surveyed by Bloomberg ranged from an increase 
of 0.5 percent to a drop of 0.3 percent. The Fed previously reported the August 
reading as a 0.2 percent increase. Manufacturing accounts for about 12 percent 
of the economy. 
 
 Stocks fell as a German government spokesman damped optimism of a quick fix to 
Europe’s debt crisis. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index dropped 0.6 percent to 
1,217.63 at 9:38 a.m. in New York. The decrease followed the gauge’s biggest 
weekly advance since 2009. Treasury securities rose, sending the yield on the 
benchmark 10-year note down to 2.21 percent from 2.25 percent late on Oct. 14. 
 
 Another report showed manufacturing in the New York region contracted in 
October at a faster pace than forecast, reflecting a lack of confidence in the 
recovery that failed to be confirmed by measures of orders and sales. The 
Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s general economic index rose to minus 8.5 
from minus 8.8 in September. Readings less than zero signal companies in the 
so-called Empire State Index, which covers New York, northern New Jersey, and 
southern Connecticut, are cutting back. 
 
 Factory Output 
 
 Today’s industrial production report showed factory output climbed 0.4 percent 
after increasing 0.3 percent in August. 
 
 Capacity utilization, which measures the amount of a plant that is in use, 
increased to 77.4 percent from 77.3 percent in August. The gauge compares with 
the average of 79.5 percent over the past 20 years. 
 
 Mining production, which includes oil drilling, rose 0.8 percent. Utility 
output dropped 1.8 percent after decreasing 2.9 percent in August. 
 
 The output of motor vehicles and parts increased 0.7 percent after climbing 
1.5 percent a month earlier, today’s report showed. Excluding autos and parts, 
manufacturing rose 0.3 percent in September for a second month. 
 
 Production of business equipment advanced 1 percent last month, reflecting a 
1.9 percent gain in computer output. The increases signal investment in capital 
equipment continues to climb. 
 
 Auto Gains 
 
 Automobile manufacturing, which has recovered from supply chain disruptions 
related to Japan’s earthquake earlier this year, is supporting factories 
through the current period of sluggish growth. September vehicle sales rose to 
a 13 million seasonally adjusted annual rate, exceeding median forecast of 
analysts surveyed by Bloomberg and the strongest since April, according to 
industry data. 
 
 Detroit-based GM reported sales rose 20 percent in September from a year 
earlier, and company executives don’t believe the economy is falling back into 
a recession. Economic data “all point to a slow-growth scenario, not a double 
dip,” Don Johnson, GM vice president of U.S. sales, said on an Oct. 3 
conference call. 
 
 Other indicators show manufacturing may have skirted a contraction after 
economic growth slowed in the first half of 2011 to weakest pace since the 
recession began. 
 
 The Institute for Supply Management’s factory index climbed to 51.6 last month 
from 50.6 in August, the Tempe, Arizona-based group said Oct. 3. A level 
greater than 50 signals expansion. 
 
 Global Demand 
 
 Alcoa, the largest U.S. aluminum producer, has looked past swinging stock 
markets and Europe’s sovereign debt crisis, as the company expects demand to 
recover. While the New-York based company posted profit last week that trailed 
analysts’ estimates as European customers cut back, it maintained its 2012 
global demand growth forecast of 12 percent. 
 
 “We’ve seen strength in many of our markets despite the sharp slowdown in 
Europe that hurt our sequential results, and I’m more concerned about the lack 
of confidence than about market fundamentals,” Klaus Kleinfeld, Alcoa’s 
president and chief executive officer, said in an Oct. 11 call with analysts. 
“It almost looks like the world is worrying itself into another recession and 
that should not be allowed to happen.” 
 
 To contact the reporter on this story: Alex Kowalski in Washington at 
[email protected] 
 
 To contact the editor responsible for this story: Christopher Wellisz at 
[email protected] 

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