This from Zero Hedge:
"Because not one Wall Street
analyst could have possibly factored in the impact of Sandy into their
expectations of the month's Industrial Production, which in October declined by -0.4% to 96.6 from 97.0
in the Fed's index, well below consensus expectations of a 0.2% rise,
and down from last month's 0.4% increase, it is only logical to blame it all on Sandy. Sure
enough, this is what the Fed just did: "Hurricane Sandy, which held
down production in the Northeast region at the end of October, is
estimated to have reduced the rate of change in total output by nearly 1
percentage point." So let's get this straight: Sandy - which hit on October 29, or with about 94% of the month of October done and impacted New York and New Jersey, not the entire US, is responsible for 250% of the entire October 0.4% drop? Can
we please get back to the "It's all Bush's fault" excuses already. At
least those were idiotic and funny. Blaming everything on Sandy is just
the former. And yes, capacity utilization for the entire USA which
came at 77.8%, the lowest since November 2011, and well below
expectations of 78.3%, was obviously crushed by a tropical storm that
impacted New York and New Jersey for 3 days in the month. Brilliant."
So, I might add, was that! Brilliant!