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News
Bureau of Labor Statistics

United States
Department
of Labor
Washington, D.C. 20212

FOR DATA ONLY: (202) 691-5200
FOR TECHNICAL INFORMATION:
(202) 691-7705
MEDIA CONTACT: (202) 691-5902
http://www.bls.gov/ppi

USDL 06-511
TRANSMISSION OF MATERIAL IN
THIS RELEASE IS EMBARGOED
UNTIL 8:30 A.M. (EST), TUESDAY,
March 21, 2006

Producer Price Indexes -- February 2006
The Producer Price Index for Finished Goods declined 1.4 percent in February, seasonally adjusted, the
Bureau of Labor Statistics of the U.S. Department of Labor reported today. This decrease followed a 0.3percent gain in January and a 0.6-percent increase in December. At the earlier stages of processing, the
intermediate goods index turned down 0.3 percent, after rising 1.2 percent in the previous month, and prices for
crude goods dropped 9.2 percent, following a 0.5-percent decrease in January. (See table A.)
Table A. Monthly and annual percent changes in selected stage-of-processing price
indexes, seasonally adjusted
Finished goods

Month
2005
Feb.
Mar.
Apr.
May
June
July
Aug.
Sept.
Oct.
Nov.
Dec.

Total
0.5
.8
.5
-.2
.1
.8
.5
1.4
.8
-.4
.6

Foods
0.6
.6
-.1
-.2
-.7
-.7
-.2
1.2
r .1
r .4
.8

Change in
InterExcept
finished goods
foods and from 12 months mediate
goods
Energy
energy
ago (unadj.)
1.9
3.0
2.1
-1.6
1.5
3.9
3.0
5.4
r 4.3
r -2.6
2.0

0.1
.1
.3
.2
-.1
.3
0
.2
-.3
r .2
.1

4.7
5.0
4.8
3.6
3.7
4.7
5.3
6.9
5.9
4.4
5.4

0.6
.9
.7
-.3
.2
1.0
.5
2.3
r 3.0
r -1.4
.1

Crude
goods
-0.7
4.7
2.7
-3.1
-1.7
5.1
3.5
10.5
r 5.7
r -1.7
-2.3

2006
Jan.
.3
.2
0
.4
5.7
1.2
-.5
Feb.
-1.4
-2.7
-4.7
.3
3.7
-.3
-9.2
r=revised. Some of the figures shown above and elsewhere in this release may differ from
those previously reported because data for October 2005 have been revised to reflect the
availability of late reports and corrections by respondents.

-2Among finished goods in February, the index for energy goods fell 4.7 percent, following no change a
month earlier. Prices for consumer foods turned down 2.7 percent, after a 0.2-percent gain in January.
Excluding prices for foods and energy, the finished goods index moved up 0.3 percent in February, compared
with a 0.4-percent advance in the previous month.
Before seasonal adjustment, the Producer Price Index for Finished Goods decreased 1.4 percent in
February to 157.8 (1982 = 100). From February 2005 to February 2006, prices for finished goods rose 3.7
percent. Over the same period, the index for finished energy goods advanced 17.0 percent, prices for finished
goods other than foods and energy increased 1.7 percent, and the finished consumer foods index fell 1.3
percent. For the 12 months ended February 2006, prices for intermediate goods moved up 8.2 percent, and the
crude goods index rose 12.9 percent.
Finished goods
The finished energy goods index, which was unchanged in January, decreased 4.7 percent in February.
Gasoline prices decreased 11.0 percent, following a 3.5-percent drop in January. The indexes for liquefied
petroleum gas and diesel fuel also fell more in February than they had a month earlier. Prices for residential
natural gas turned down, after rising in the previous month, and the index for residential electric power was
unchanged, after increasing in the prior month. By contrast, the index for lubricating greases advanced 4.1
percent, compared with a 1.3-percent increase in January. (See table 2.)
Table B. Monthly and annual percent changes in selected price indexes for intermediate goods
and crude goods, seasonally adjusted
Intermediate goods

Month Foods
Energy
2005
Feb.
-0.4
1.2
Mar.
1.0
3.4
Apr.
-.1
3.2
May
.7
-.9
June
-.1
1.7
July
-.2
4.4
Aug.
-.1
3.0
Sept.
-.1
7.4
Oct.
.4
r 8.8
Nov.
.1
r -6.5
Dec.
-.1
-.5

Crude goods

Change in
intermediate
Except
goods from
foods and 12 months ago
energy
(unadj.)
0.5
.4
.1
-.3
-.1
.1
-.1
1.0
r 1.4
r .3
.3

8.4
8.7
8.1
6.3
6.2
6.8
6.3
8.7
r 10.9
8.4
8.4

Foods
-2.8
4.7
-2.2
-1.2
-2.4
-.6
-1.2
1.7
r -.1
r .8
2.5

Change in
crude goods
Except
from
Energy foods and 12 months ago
(unadj.) energy
(unadj.)
1.5
7.0
6.5
-4.5
-.5
10.8
6.0
17.1
r 10.9
r -4.4
-5.4

-2.1
-.5
2.2
-2.9
-3.6
.6
4.6
5.6
r -1.5
r 3.5
.5

8.3
11.4
12.4
5.4
2.5
7.9
12.1
29.7
r 31.8
21.0
22.1

2006
Jan.
.9
1.9
1.0
9.3
-3.0
.6
-.1
23.6
Feb.
-1.2
-3.1
.5
8.2
-3.0
-16.2
3.3
12.9
r=revised. Some of the figures shown above and elsewhere in this release may differ from those previously
reported because data for October 2005 have been revised to reflect the availability of late reports and
corrections by respondents.

-3Prices for finished consumer foods declined 2.7 percent in February, following a 0.2-percent rise in the
previous month. Leading this downturn, the fresh and dry vegetables index dropped 27.1 percent, after moving
up 5.9 percent in January. Prices for beef and veal, pork, and eggs for fresh use also turned down in February,
following increases a month earlier. The index for dairy products fell more in February than it had in the
preceding month, and prices for processed fruits and vegetables rose less than they had in January. By contrast,
the index for bakery products advanced 0.8 percent in February, after climbing 0.3 percent in the prior month.
Prices for finfish and shellfish posted smaller declines than they had in January.
Price increases for finished consumer goods excluding foods and energy slowed from a 0.4-percent rate
in January to a 0.2-percent rate in February. The light motor trucks index moved up 0.5 percent in February,
following a 0.7-percent gain in the preceding month. Prices for passenger cars, book publishing, and for
sporting and athletic goods turned down, after rising in January. The index for men’s and boys’ apparel fell
more in February than it had a month earlier. Alternatively, cigarette prices advanced 0.5 percent, following a
0.3-percent decline in the prior month. The indexes for household furniture and for women’s, girls’, and
infants’ apparel also turned up in February, after decreasing in the previous month. Prices for periodical
circulation rose more than they had in January.
Subsequent to a 0.3-percent gain in January, the index for capital equipment increased 0.1 percent in
February. Prices for civilian aircraft moved up 0.4 percent, following a 0.7-percent advance in January. The
indexes for passenger cars and commercial furniture turned down in February, after rising a month earlier.
Prices for light motor trucks and for agricultural machinery and equipment rose less than in January, while the
electronic computers index fell more in February than it had a month earlier. By contrast, prices for integrating
and measuring instruments turned up 0.4 percent, following a 0.8-percent decline in the preceding month. The
indexes for truck trailers and ships also turned up, after declining in January, while prices for metal cutting
machine tools increased at faster rates in February than they had a month earlier.
Intermediate goods
The Producer Price Index for Intermediate Materials, Supplies, and Components declined 0.3 percent in
February, following a 1.2-percent gain in January. The majority of this downturn is attributable to prices for
intermediate energy goods, which fell after advancing in the previous month. The index for intermediate foods
and feeds also decreased, after rising in January. Prices for materials and components for construction and the
index for materials for nondurable manufacturing increased at slower rates in February than they had in the
preceding month. Conversely, prices for materials for durable manufacturing rose more than they had a month
earlier. The index for intermediate goods other than foods and energy climbed 0.5 percent in February,
following a 1.0-percent jump in January. (See table B.)
The index for intermediate energy goods declined 3.1 percent in February, after advancing 1.9 percent in
the prior month. Prices for industrial natural gas fell 7.0 percent, following a 5.7-percent gain in January. The
indexes for commercial electric power, commercial natural gas, and industrial electric power also moved down
in February, after increasing a month earlier. Prices for gasoline, natural gas to electric utilities, diesel fuel, and
liquefied petroleum gas decreased at quicker rates than they had in January. Alternatively, the residual fuels
index rose 1.4 percent in February, compared with a 3.6-percent decline in the previous month. (See table 2.)

-4Prices for materials and components for construction moved up 0.3 percent in February, following a 1.0percent advance in the preceding month. The concrete products index increased 0.4 percent, after rising 1.9
percent in January. Prices for softwood lumber, plastic construction products, and for cast iron pressure and soil
pipe fittings also went up at slower rates in February than they had a month earlier. The indexes for wiring
devices, asphalt felts and coatings, and for building paper and board fell, following increases in January.
Conversely, prices for nonferrous wire and cable climbed 1.8 percent in February, after decreasing 0.3 percent
in the previous month. The index for environmental controls also turned up, while prices for fabricated
structural metal products and gypsum products advanced at quicker rates than they had in January.
The index for intermediate foods and feeds declined 1.2 percent in February, following a 0.9-percent
gain a month earlier. Prices for prepared animal feeds moved down 0.4 percent, after rising 2.5 percent in
January. The indexes for beef and veal, pork, confectionery materials, and for shortening and cooking oils also
turned down in February, following increases in the prior month. Dairy product prices decreased at faster rates
than they had in January. By contrast, the flour index moved up 3.5 percent, compared with a 1.2-percent
decline in the previous month. Prices for dry mix preparations advanced more in February than they had in
January, while the index for non-frozen, perishable prepared foods fell less than in the preceding month.
Prices for materials for nondurable manufacturing increased 1.6 percent in February, following a 1.9percent advance in January. The index for primary basic organic chemicals moved down 1.4 percent in
February, compared with a 10.4-percent jump a month earlier. Prices for basic inorganic chemicals, paper, and
gray fabrics rose less than they had in January, while the nitrogenates index fell more in February than it had in
the prior month. Prices for inedible fats and oils declined, after advancing in the preceding month. By contrast,
the paperboard index increased 5.3 percent in February, following a 0.7-percent gain in January. Prices for
plastic resins and materials and for ethanol turned up, after decreasing in the previous month. The index for
medicinal and botanical chemicals rose, after showing no change in January.
The index for materials for durable manufacturing advanced 1.6 percent in February, following a 1.0percent advance in January. Prices for cold rolled steel sheet and strip increased 2.0 percent, after decreasing
2.6 percent in the prior month. The indexes for semifinished steel mill products, thermoplastic resins, and
unprocessed filament yarns also turned up in February, following declines a month earlier. Prices for
nonferrous mill shapes and both primary and secondary aluminum rose more than they had in January. By
contrast, the index for hot rolled steel sheet and strip fell 1.4 percent in February, after increasing 0.8 percent in
the previous month. Prices for building paper and board and for hot rolled steel bars, plates, and structural
shapes also moved down, following increases in the preceding month, while the softwood lumber index
advanced less than it had in January.
Crude goods
The Producer Price Index for Crude Materials for Further Processing decreased 9.2 percent in February,
following a 0.5-percent decline in January. Prices for crude energy materials turned down in February, after
rising in the preceding month. Alternatively, the index for basic industrial materials increased, subsequent to
edging down in January. Prices for crude foodstuffs and feedstuffs fell at the same rate as in the prior month.
(See table B.)

-5The crude energy materials index fell 16.2 percent in February, after increasing 0.6 percent in January.
Prices for natural gas sank 24.0 percent, following a 1.4-percent decline in the previous month. The crude
petroleum index moved down 5.2 percent in February, after advancing 2.6 percent in January. Prices for coal
moved up 0.3 percent, following a 10.1-percent jump in the preceding month. (See table 2.)
Prices for basic industrial materials advanced 3.3 percent in February, after inching down 0.1 percent in
the preceding month. The majority of this upturn is attributable to the iron and steel scrap index, which gained
7.1 percent following an 8.4-percent decline in January. Prices for logs, bolts, timber, and pulpwood also
turned up in February, after falling in the prior month. The indexes for aluminum base scrap, gold ores, and
iron ore rose at faster rates than in January. By contrast, prices for wastepaper declined 3.6 percent, following a
1.6-percent increase a month earlier. The indexes for raw cotton and industrial sand also turned down in
February, while prices for copper base scrap increased less than in the previous month.
The crude foodstuffs and feedstuffs index fell 3.0 percent in February, matching its January decline. In
February, falling prices for slaughter cattle, fluid milk, fresh vegetables (except potatoes), slaughter hogs, and
slaughter turkeys outweighed rising prices for wheat, alfalfa hay, corn, Irish potatoes for processing, and raw
cane sugar.
Net output price indexes for mining, manufacturing, and services industries
Mining. The Producer Price Index for the Net Output of Total Mining Industries fell 12.8 percent in February,
after edging down 0.2 percent in the preceding month. (Net output price indexes are not seasonally adjusted.)
Prices received by the industry for crude petroleum and natural gas extraction dropped 15.8 percent, after rising
3.4 percent in January. The industry index for natural gas liquid extraction decreased more than it had in the
preceding month, while prices received by the industries for drilling oil and gas wells, bituminous coal
underground mining, and bituminous coal and lignite surface mining advanced at slower rates than they had a
month earlier. By contrast, the industry index for oil and gas operations support activities moved down 0.6
percent in February, compared with a 2.9-percent decline in the prior month. Prices received by the industries
for gold ore mining, iron ore mining, and for crushed and broken limestone mining and quarrying increased
more than they had in January. In February, the Producer Price Index for Total Mining Industries was 207.3
(December 1984 = 100), 24.7 percent above its year-ago level.
Manufacturing. The Producer Price Index for Total Manufacturing Industries declined 0.4 percent in February,
following a 0.9-percent rise in the previous month. Leading this downturn, prices received by manufacturers of
petroleum and coal products fell 4.3 percent, after increasing 3.2 percent in January. The industry group
indexes for transportation equipment, food manufacturing, and medical equipment and supplies manufacturing
also turned down in February, after moving up in the preceding month. Prices received by the industry groups
for beverage and tobacco manufacturing and nonmetallic mineral product manufacturing rose less than they had
in the prior month. Alternatively, the chemical manufacturing industry group index went up 1.1 percent in
February, following a 0.8-percent gain a month earlier. Prices received by the industry groups for primary
metal manufacturing and paper manufacturing also advanced more than they had in January, and the industry
group index for furniture and related product manufacturing turned up, following a decline in the prior month.
In February, the Producer Price Index for Total Manufacturing Industries was 153.5 (December 1984 = 100),
4.4 percent above its year-ago level.

-6Services. Among services industries, prices received by commercial bankers decreased 0.8 percent in February,
after advancing 0.9 percent in the previous month. The industry indexes for scheduled passenger air
transportation, general medical and surgical hospitals, direct health and medical insurance carriers, and
investment banking and securities dealing rose less than they had in January, while prices received by the
United States Postal Service were unchanged, following increases in the preceding month. By contrast, the
industry index for offices of certified public accountants moved up 3.2 percent in February, compared with a
2.1-percent decline in the prior month. Prices received by the industries for temporary help services; inland
water freight transportation; long distance, general freight trucking (truckload); and radio stations also turned
up, following decreases in January.
*****
Producer Price Index data for March 2006 are scheduled to be released on Tuesday, April 18, 2006, at 8:30 a.m.
(EDT).

Technical Note
Brief Explanation of Producer Prices Indexes
The Producer Price Index (PPI) of the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) is a family of indexes that measure the average
change over time in the prices received by domestic producers of goods and services. PPIs measure price change from the perspective
of the seller. This contrasts with other measures, such as the Consumer Price Index (CPI). CPIs measure price change from the
purchaser’s perspective. Sellers’ and purchasers’ prices can differ due to government subsidies, sales and excise taxes, and
distribution costs.
More than 8,000 PPIs for individual products and groups of products are released each month. PPIs are available for the
products of virtually every industry in the mining and manufacturing sectors of the U.S. economy. New PPIs are gradually being
introduced for the products of industries in the trade, finance, and services sectors of the economy.
More than 100,000 price quotations per month are organized into three sets of PPIs: (1) Stage-of-processing indexes; (2)
commodity indexes; and (3) indexes for the net output of industries and their products. The stage-of-processing structure organizes
products by class of buyer and degree of fabrication. The commodity structure organizes products by similarity of end use or material
composition. The entire output of various industries is sampled to derive price indexes for the net output of industries and their
products.
Stage-of-Processing Indexes
Within the stage-of-processing system, finished goods are commodities that will not undergo further processing and are ready
for sale to the final-demand user, either an individual consumer or business firm. Consumer foods include unprocessed foods such as
eggs and fresh vegetables, as well as processed foods such as bakery products and meats. Other finished consumer goods include
durable goods such as automobiles, household furniture, and appliances, as well as nondurable goods such as apparel and home
heating oil. Capital equipment includes producer durable goods such as heavy motor trucks, tractors, and machine tools.
The stage-of-processing category for intermediate materials, supplies, and components consists partly of commodities that
have been processed but require further processing. Examples of such semifinished goods include flour, cotton yarn, steel mill
products, and lumber. The intermediate goods category also encompasses nondurable, physically complete items purchased by
business firms as inputs for their operations. Examples include diesel fuel, belts and belting, paper boxes, and fertilizers.
Crude materials for further processing are products entering the market for the first time that have not been manufactured or
fabricated and that are not sold directly to consumers. Crude foodstuffs and feedstuffs include items such as grains and livestock.
Examples of crude nonfood materials include raw cotton, crude petroleum, coal, hides and skins, and iron and steel scrap.
Commodity Indexes
The commodity classification structure of the PPI organizes products by similarity of end use or material composition,
disregarding industry of origin. Fifteen major commodity groupings (2-digit commodity codes) make up the All Commodities Index.
Each major commodity grouping includes (in descending order of aggregation) subgroups (3-digit), product classes (4-digit),
subproduct classes (6-digit), and individual items (8-digit). Nearly all 8-digit commodities under the traditional commodity coding
system are now derived from corresponding industry-classified product indexes. In such instances, movements in the traditional
commodity price indexes and corresponding percent changes will be virtually identical to their industry-based counterparts, even if
their index levels differ.
Industry Net-Output Price Indexes
PPIs for the net output of industries and their products are grouped according to the North American Industry Classification
System (NAICS). Prior to the release of January 2004, industry-based PPIs were published according to the Standard Industrial
Classification (SIC) system. Industry price indexes are compatible with other economic time series organized by industry, such as
data on employment, wages, and productivity. Table 5 of the PPI Detailed Report includes data for NAICS industries and industry
groups (3-, 4-, 5-, and 6-digit codes); Census product classes (7- and 8-digits), products (9-digits), and more detailed subproducts (11digits); and, for some industries, indexes for other sources of revenue.
Indexes may represent one of three kinds of product indexes. Every industry has primary product indexes to show changes in
prices received by establishments classified in the industry for products made primarily, but not necessarily exclusively, by that
industry. The industry classification of an establishment is determined by which products comprise a plurality of its total shipment
value. In addition, most industries have secondary product indexes that show changes in prices received by establishments classified
in the industry for products chiefly made in some other industry. Finally, some industries have miscellaneous receipts indexes to show
price changes in other sources of revenue received by establishments within the industry that are not derived from sales of their
products, for example, resales of purchased materials, or revenues from parking lots owned by a manufacturing plant.

Data Collection
PPIs are based on selling prices reported by establishments of all sizes selected by probability sampling, with the probability
of selection proportionate to size. Individual items and transaction terms from these firms are also chosen by probability proportionate
to size. The BLS strongly encourages cooperating companies to supply actual transaction prices at the time of shipment to minimize
the use of list prices. Prices submitted by survey respondents are effective on the Tuesday of the week containing the 13th day of the
month. This survey is conducted primarily through the mail.
Price data are provided on a voluntary and confidential basis; only sworn BLS employees are allowed access to individual
company price reports. BLS publishes price indexes instead of unit dollar prices. All PPIs are subject to revision 4 months after
original publication to reflect the availability of late reports and corrections by respondents.
BLS periodically updates the PPI sample of survey respondents to better reflect current conditions when the structure,
membership, technology, or product mix of an industry shifts significantly and to spread reporting burden among smaller firms.
Results of these resampling efforts are incorporated into the PPI with the release of data for January and July.
As part of an ongoing effort to expand coverage to sectors of the economy other than mining and manufacturing, an
increasing number of service sector industries have been introduced into the PPI. The following list of recently introduced industries
includes the month and year in which an article describing the industry’s content appeared in the PPI Detailed Report.

Title
Wireless telecommunications
Telephone communications, except radio telephone
Television broadcasting
Grocery stores
Meat and fish (seafood) markets
Fruit and vegetable markets
Candy, nut, and confectionery stores
Retail bakeries
Miscellaneous food stores
New car dealers
Gasoline service stations
Boat dealers
Recreational vehicle dealers
Miscellaneous retail
Security brokers, dealers, and investment bankers
Investment advice
Life insurance carriers
Property and casualty insurance
Insurance agencies and brokerages
Operators and lessors of nonresidential buildings
Real estate agents and managers
Prepackaged software
Data processing services
Home health care services
Legal services
Engineering design, analysis, and consulting services
Architectural design, analysis, and consulting services
Premiums for property and casualty insurance

New warehouse building construction
Merchant wholesalers, durable goods
Merchant wholesalers, nondurable goods
Wholesale trade agents and brokers
Furniture and home furnishings stores
Electronics and appliance stores
Building material and garden equipment and supplies dealers

Code
SIC
4812
4813
4833
5411
5421
5431
5441
5461
5499
5511
5541
5551
5561
59
6211
6282
6311
6331
6412
6512
6531
7372
7374
8082
8111
8711
8712
9331
NAICS
236221
423
424
425120
442
443
444

PPI Detailed
Report Issue
July 1999
July 1995
July 2002
July 2000
July 2000
July 2000
July 2000
July 2000
July 2000
July 2000
January 2002
January 2002
January 2002
January 2001
January 2001
January 2003
January 1999
July 1998
January 2003
January 1996
January 1996
January 1998
January 2002
January 1997
January 1997
January 1997
January 1997
July 1998

July 2005
July 2005
July 2005
July 2005
January 2004
January 2004
January 2004

Title
Clothing and clothing accessories stores
Sporting goods, hobby, book, and music stores
General merchandise stores
Miscellaneous store retailers
Internet service providers
Web search portals
Commercial banking
Savings institutions
Direct health and medical insurance carriers
Construction, mining, and forestry machinery and equipment rental
and leasing
Security guards and patrol services
Fitness and recreational sports centers

Code
448
451
452
453
518111
518112
522110
522120
524114
532412

PPI Detailed
Report Issue
January 2004
January 2004
January 2004
January 2004
July 2005
July 2005
January 2005
January 2005
July 2004
January 2005

561612
713940

July 2005
July 2005

Weights
Weights for most traditional commodity groupings of the PPI, as well as weights for commodity-based aggregate indexes
calculated using traditional commodity groupings, such as stage-of-processing indexes, currently reflect 1997 values of shipments as
reported in the Census of Manufactures and other sources. From January 1996 through December 2001, PPI weights were derived
from 1992 shipment values. Industry indexes also are now calculated with 1997 net output weights. This periodic update of the value
weights used to calculate the PPI is done to more accurately reflect changes in production and marketing patterns in the economy. Net
output values of shipments are used as weights for industry indexes. Net output values refer to the value of shipments from
establishments within the industry to buyers outside the industry. However, weights for commodity price indexes are based on gross
shipment values, including shipment values between establishments within the same industry. As a result, broad commodity grouping
indexes, such as the PPI for All Commodities, are affected by the multiple counting of price change at successive stages of processing,
which can lead to exaggerated or misleading signals about inflation. Stage-of-processing indexes partially correct this defect, but
industry indexes consistently correct for this at all levels of aggregation. Therefore, industry and stage-of-processing indexes are more
appropriate than broad commodity groupings for economic analysis of general price trends.
Price Index Reference Base
Effective with publication of January 1988 data, many important PPI series (including stage-of-processing groupings and
most commodity groups and individual items) were placed on a new reference base, 1982=100. From 1971 through 1987, the
standard reference base for most PPI series was 1967=100. Except for rounding differences, the shift to the new reference base did
not alter any previously published percent changes for affected PPI series. (See “Calculating Index Changes,” below.) The 1982
reference base is not used for commodity indexes with a base later than December 1981 or for industry net output indexes and their
products.
For further information on the underlying concepts and methodology of the Producer Price Index, see chapter 14, “Producer
Prices,” in BLS Handbook of Methods (April 1997), Bulletin 2490. This document can be downloaded from the BLS Web site at
(http://www.bls.gov/opub/hom/homch14_itc.htm), and reprints are available on request.
Calculating Index Changes
Each PPI measures price changes from a reference period which equals 100.0. An increase of 5.5 percent from the reference
period in the Finished Goods Price Index, for example, is shown as 105.5. This change also can be expressed in dollars, as follows:
Prices received by domestic producers of a sample of finished goods have risen from $100 in 1982 to $105.50. Likewise, a current
index of 90.0 would indicate that prices received by producers of finished goods are 10 percent lower than they were in 1982.

Movements of price indexes from one month to another are usually expressed as percent changes, rather than as changes in
index points. Index point changes are affected by the level of the index in relation to its base period, whereas percent changes are not.
The following example shows the computation of index point and percent changes.
Index point change
Finished Goods Price Index
Less previous index
Equals index point change
Index percent change

107.5
104.0
3.5

Index point change
Divided by the previous index
Equals
Result multiplied by 100
Equals percent change

3.5
104.0
0.034
0.034 x 100
3.4
Seasonally Adjusted and Unadjusted Data

Because price data are used for different purposes by different groups, BLS publishes seasonally adjusted and unadjusted
changes each month. Seasonally adjusted data are preferred for analyzing general price trends in the economy, because these data
eliminate the effect of changes that normally occur at about the same time, and in about the same magnitude, every year—such as
price movements resulting from normal weather patterns, regular production and marketing cycles, model changeovers, seasonal
discounts, and holidays. For these reasons, seasonally adjusted data more clearly reveal underlying cyclical trends. Unadjusted data
are of primary interest to users who need information that can be related to actual dollar values of transactions. Individuals requiring
this information include marketing specialists, purchasing agents, budget and cost analysts, contract specialists, and commodity
traders. It is the unadjusted data that are generally cited when escalating long-term contracts such as purchasing agreements or real
estate leases. (See Escalation and Producer Price Indexes: A Guide for Contracting Parties, BLS Report 807, September 1991,
available on request from the BLS.)
In 1998, the PPI implemented the X-12-ARIMA Seasonal Adjustment Method; prior to that year the PPI employed the X-11
method. Each year, the seasonal status of most commodity indexes is re-evaluated to reflect more recent price behavior. Industry net
output indexes are not seasonally adjusted. For time series that exhibit seasonal pricing patterns, new seasonal factors are estimated
and applied to the unadjusted data for the previous 5 years. These updated seasonally adjusted indexes replace the most recent 5 years
of seasonal data.
Seasonal factors may be applied to series using either a direct or aggregative method. Generally, commodity indexes are
seasonally adjusted using direct seasonal adjustment, which produces a more complete elimination of seasonal movements than the
aggregative method. However, the direct seasonal adjustment process may not yield figures that possess additive consistency. Thus, a
seasonally adjusted index for a broad category that is directly adjusted may not be logically consistent with all seasonally adjusted
indexes for its components. Seasonal movements for stage-of-processing indexes are derived indirectly through an aggregative
method that combines movements of a wide variety of subproduct class (6-digit) series.
Seasonally adjusted indexes can become problematic when previously stable and predictable price patterns abruptly change.
If the new pattern persists, the seasonal adjustment method will eventually reflect it adequately; if these patterns keep shifting,
however, seasonally adjusted data will become chronically troublesome. This problem occurs relatively infrequently for farm and
food-related products but has more often affected manufactured products such as automobiles and steel.
Since January 1988, the PPI has used Intervention Analysis Seasonal Adjustment methods to enhance the calculation of
seasonal factors. With this technique, outlier values that may distort the seasonal pattern are removed from the data prior to applying
the standard seasonal factor estimation procedure. For example, a possible economic cause for large price movements for petroleumbased products might have been the Persian Gulf War. In this case, intervention techniques allowed for better estimates of seasonally
adjusted data. On the whole, very few series have required intervention. Out of nearly 900 seasonally adjusted series, only 16
interventions were performed in 1997.
For more information relating to seasonal adjustment methods, see (1) “Appendix A: Seasonal Adjustment Methodology at
BLS,” in the BLS Handbook of Methods (April 1997), Bulletin 2490 and (2) “Summary of Changes to the PPI’s Seasonal Adjustment
Methodology” in the January 1995 issue of Producer Price Indexes.
Producer Price Index Data Via the Internet
In 1995, the BLS began posting PPI series, news releases, and technical information to both a World Wide Web (WWW) site
and a file transfer protocol (FTP) site. During the years following the introduction of PPI Internet services, usage of these sites
eclipsed more traditional methods of data dissemination, such as subscriptions to the PPI Detailed Report. There were more than 1.6
million accesses of PPI series over the Internet during the 12 months ended December 31, 2003.

Retrieving PPI data from the PPI Website
PPI data can be obtained from the WWW address (http://www.bls.gov/ppi). Scrolling down the page to the “Get Detailed
Statistics” header reveals the following 5 methods of data retrieval:
• Most Requested Series is a form-based application that allows the user to quickly obtain PPI time series data by selecting from
two separate lists (commodity and industry) of the most commonly requested time series, including the All Commodities Index and
the stage-of-processing indexes (for example, Finished Goods). Within each list, any one—or all—of the time series shown can be
selected. A user can modify the date range and output options after executing the query, using the reformat button above the data
output table.
• Create Customized Tables is a form-based query application designed for users unfamiliar with the PPI coding structure. It
guides a user through the PPI classification system by listing index titles and does not require knowledge of commodity or industry
codes. Data retrieved are based on a query formulated by selecting data characteristics from lists provided. Two options are available
to create customized tables, depending on a user’s browser capability. The one-screen option is a JavaScript application that uses a
single screen to guide a user through the available time series data. The second option is a multiple screen, nonJava-based application.
Both methods allow a user to browse the PPI coding structure and select multiple series codes. Using the one-screen option, users can
modify the date range and output options after executing the query using the reformat button above the data output table.
• Series Report is a form-based application that uses formatted PPI time series identifiers (commodity or industry codes) as input in
extracting data according to a specified set of date ranges and output options. This application provides the most efficient path for
those users who are familiar with the format of PPI time series identifiers. Up to 300 indexes can be extracted at one time.
There are three basic formats for creating a unique PPI time series identifier. For commodity and stage-of-processing indexes,
enter a “wpu” prefix (not seasonally adjusted) or a “wps” prefix (seasonally adjusted) in combination with a commodity-based code to
create a series identifier.
Commodity code
wps063
wpu063803
wpusop3000

Will provide data for:
Drugs and pharmaceuticals, seasonally adjusted
Pharmaceutical preparations, cardiovascular system
Finished goods, not seasonally adjusted

For a current industry-based price index organized according to the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS), enter
the prefix “pcu” followed by the industry-product code. The series identifier for products primary to an industry include 12 numeric
digits, the six-digit industry code is repeated, and up to seven additional digits of product detail. Dashes are used as place holders for
higher-level industry group codes.
Industry-product code,
Current NAICS series
pcu325---325--pcu336110336110
pcu621111621111411

Will provide data for:
Chemical manufacturing, not seasonally adjusted
Automobile and light duty motor vehicle manufacturing
Offices of physicians, one and two physician practices and single specialty group practices,
general/family practice

To identify a discontinued industry-product code based on the Standard Industrial Classification (SIC), enter a “pdu” prefix and “#”
between the fourth and fifth characters of the product code. A series identifier for the discontinued dataset uses underscores as
placeholders to complete a reference to an SIC industry group code of less than four digits. (All PPI industry-based indexes organized
by SIC were discontinued with the introduction of the NAICS.) In all cases, no spaces are permitted.
Industry-product code,
Discontinued SIC series
pdu28__#
pdu331_#
pdu3711#111

Will provide data for:
Chemicals and allied products, not seasonally adjusted
Blast furnaces, steel works, and rolling and finishing mills, not seasonally adjusted
Passenger cars

• Flat Files and the FTP server are best suited for those users requiring access to either a large volume of time series data or other
PPI-related documentation (such as, seasonal factor and relative importance tables). The FTP site can be accessed at
(ftp://ftp.bls.gov) or directly from the links on the “Get Detailed Statistics” page or the PPI homepage. Data and documentation
available for download include:
Directory:
• NAICS Current Series
/pub/time.series/pc
• SIC Discontinued Series
/pub/time.series/pd
• Commodity Series
/pub/time.series/wp
• Special Requests
/pub/special.requests/ppi
• Latest News Release
/pub/news.release/ppi.txt

The FTP site maintains files to help with searches and downloads. These files are centrally located in the /pub/doc directory.
Within this directory, go to the overview.txt file for an overview relating to all BLS data available through the FTP site. For
commodity-based PPI data (which appear in tables 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, and 8 of the PPI monthly detailed report and tables 1, 2, 3, and 5 of the
monthly news release), the program help file is wp.txt. For current industry-based PPI data based on the NAICS (which appear in
tables 4, 5, and 9 of the monthly PPI report and table 4 of the monthly news release), the file is pc.txt. For industry-based SIC time
series that have been discontinued, go to pd.txt. (These and other help files are also maintained within each of the five directories
listed above.)
Other Sources of PPI Data
PPI data can also be accessed via the BLS homepage (http://www.bls.gov). After clicking the “Get Detailed Statistics” link
at the top of the homepage a chart appears listing all of the available BLS programs. The following four methods are available for PPI
data: Most requested statistics, create customized tables (one screen or multiple screens), and flat files. Additional sources of BLS
data also are accessible from this page including: Economic news releases, series report, and economy at a glance.
Additional information
The PPI homepage (http://www.bls.gov/ppi) contains additional information regarding PPI data and methodology. The top
section of the homepage provides PPI news releases, both current and archived, as well as general PPI information. The “Tables
Created by BLS” section found beneath the statistics section provides relative importance and seasonal factor tables. The remaining
sections offer special notices and publications pertaining to PPI methodology and applications.
For questions or comments regarding PPI data classification, methodology, or data availability on the Internet, call or e-mail
the Section of Index Analysis and Public Information directly at (202) 691-7705 or ppi-info@bls.gov. Data also can be obtained by
calling the national fax-on-demand service at (202) 691-6325. This service enables customers to request faxes of BLS data 24 hours a
day, 7 days a week.

Table 1. Producer price indexes and percent changes by stage of processing
(1982=100)
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
|
|
|Unadjusted
|
|
|
| percent
|Seasonally adjusted
| Relative |
Unadjusted index
|change to
|percent change from:
Grouping
|importance|
|Feb. 2006 from:|
|
|_______________________|_______________|___________________________
|
Dec.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Oct.
|Jan.
|Feb.
| Feb. | Jan. |Nov. to|Dec. to |Jan. to
|
2005 1/|2005 2/|2006 2/|2006 2/| 2005 | 2006 | Dec. |
Jan. | Feb.
_________________________________________________|__________|_______|_______|_______|_______|_______|_______|_________|_________
|
Finished goods...................................| 100.000
160.9
160.0
157.8
3.7
-1.4
0.6
0.3
-1.4
Finished consumer goods........................|
75.253
167.1
165.8
162.7
4.5
-1.9
.9
.2
-1.9
Finished consumer foods......................|
20.207
155.8
157.2
153.4
-1.3
-2.4
.8
.2
-2.7
Crude......................................|
1.644
136.8
156.3
127.6
-10.3 -18.4
9.6
.5
-17.2
Processed..................................|
18.564
157.4
157.2
155.5
-.6
-1.1
.1
.1
-1.3
Finished consumer goods, excluding foods.....|
55.045
171.2
168.7
166.0
6.8
-1.6
.9
.2
-1.6
Nondurable goods less foods................|
40.131
184.9
181.5
177.6
9.4
-2.1
1.1
.1
-2.2
Durable goods..............................|
14.914
138.0
137.8
137.6
.4
-.1
.1
.5
.1
Capital equipment..............................|
24.747
145.9
146.0
146.2
1.6
.1
.1
.3
.1
Manufacturing industries.....................|
6.665
147.2
147.6
148.0
2.1
.3
.1
.1
.3
Nonmanufacturing industries..................|
18.082
145.3
145.4
145.4
1.3
0
.1
.3
.1
|
Intermediate materials, supplies, and components.| 100.000
162.5
161.7
161.0
8.2
-.4
.1
1.2
-.3
Materials and components for manufacturing.....|
45.166
149.3
150.9
152.2
5.4
.9
.3
1.1
.8
Materials for food manufacturing.............|
2.589
146.6
146.4
144.6
-.7
-1.2
-.2
.1
-1.5
Materials for nondurable manufacturing.......|
14.913
172.9
171.9
174.6
10.4
1.6
0
1.9
1.6
Materials for durable manufacturing..........|
9.948
159.9
166.3
169.1
6.3
1.7
1.5
1.0
1.6
Components for manufacturing.................|
17.716
130.2
131.6
131.7
1.7
.1
-.1
.5
0
Materials and components for construction......|
12.635
179.2
183.8
184.5
5.6
.4
.6
1.0
.3
Processed fuels and lubricants.................|
20.800
180.5
168.1
161.2
23.1
-4.1
-.6
2.0
-3.7
Manufacturing industries ....................|
8.069
176.1
170.4
162.5
24.9
-4.6
-1.4
3.5
-4.3
Nonmanufacturing industries..................|
12.731
183.2
166.7
160.4
22.0
-3.8
0
1.1
-3.4
Containers.....................................|
3.014
166.8
171.2
171.8
3.4
.4
.7
.9
.4
Supplies.......................................|
18.385
153.6
155.3
155.7
3.8
.3
.1
.8
.3
Manufacturing industries.....................|
4.028
157.8
160.2
160.9
4.7
.4
.2
.5
.4
Nonmanufacturing industries..................|
14.357
151.2
152.7
153.0
3.5
.2
.1
.9
.2
Feeds......................................|
0.923
107.9
109.8
109.2
7.4
-.5
.2
3.4
-.5
Other supplies.............................|
13.434
156.6
158.0
158.4
3.3
.3
.1
.8
.3
|
Crude materials for further processing...........| 100.000
211.6
201.4
183.5
12.9
-8.9
-2.3
-.5
-9.2
Foodstuffs and feedstuffs......................|
27.740
120.8
119.3
116.6
-4.0
-2.3
2.5
-3.0
-3.0
Nonfood materials..............................|
72.260
276.5
259.9
230.4
21.5 -11.4
-4.0
.5
-11.5
Nonfood materials except fuel 3/.............|
35.036
189.7
193.0
192.0
19.0
-.5
3.9
1.2
-.8
Manufacturing 3/...........................|
34.574
175.6
178.7
177.7
19.3
-.6
3.9
1.1
-.8
Construction...............................|
0.462
197.7
200.7
201.8
1.6
.5
-.4
.2
.5
Crude fuel 4/................................|
37.224
397.0
347.4
272.2
25.0 -21.6
-10.5
-.3
-21.6
Manufacturing industries...................|
3.298
372.0
326.8
257.5
24.6 -21.2
-10.4
0
-21.2
Nonmanufacturing industries................|
33.926
406.5
355.6
278.4
25.0 -21.7
-10.5
-.3
-21.7
|
Special groupings
|
|
Finished goods, excluding foods..................|5/ 79.793
162.0
160.4
158.7
5.1
-1.1
.6
.2
-1.1
Intermediate materials less foods and feeds......|6/ 96.488
163.8
163.0
162.4
8.5
-.4
.1
1.2
-.4
Intermediate foods and feeds.....................|6/ 3.512
134.4
135.0
133.5
1.4
-1.1
-.1
.9
-1.2
Crude materials less agricultural products 3/ 7/.|8/ 71.589
284.9
267.6
237.0
22.1 -11.4
-4.1
.4
-11.6
|
Finished energy goods............................|5/ 20.134
152.3
145.5
138.8
17.0
-4.6
2.0
0
-4.7
Finished goods less energy.......................|5/ 79.866
156.8
157.6
156.8
1.0
-.5
.3
.3
-.5
Finished consumer goods less energy..............|5/ 55.119
161.6
162.7
161.4
.6
-.8
.4
.3
-.8
|
Finished goods less foods and energy.............|5/ 59.659
157.5
158.1
158.3
1.7
.1
.1
.4
.3
Finished consumer goods less foods and energy....|5/ 34.911
165.4
166.3
166.6
1.8
.2
.2
.4
.2
Consumer nondurable goods less foods and energy..|5/ 19.997
187.9
189.9
190.6
2.8
.4
.2
.3
.4
|
Intermediate energy goods........................|6/ 21.382
180.1
167.3
161.6
24.3
-3.4
-.5
1.9
-3.1
Intermediate materials less energy...............|6/ 78.618
155.7
158.1
158.8
4.6
.4
.3
1.0
.4
Intermediate materials less foods and energy.....|6/ 75.106
157.1
159.6
160.4
4.8
.5
.3
1.0
.5
|
Crude energy materials 3/........................|8/ 54.720
308.6
280.8
235.2
26.0 -16.2
-5.4
.6
-16.2
Crude materials less energy......................|8/ 45.280
143.2
144.5
144.9
2.0
.3
1.8
-1.9
-.5
Crude nonfood materials less energy 4/...........|8/ 17.540
206.4
215.5
224.1
11.9
4.0
.5
-.1
3.3
|
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
1/

Comprehensive relative importance figures are initially computed
after the publication of December indexes and are recalculated
after final December indexes are available.
2/ The indexes for October 2005 have been recalculated to incorporate
late reports and corrections by respondents. All indexes
are subject to revision 4 months after original publication.
3/ Includes crude petroleum.

4/
5/
6/
7/

8/

Excludes crude petroleum.
Percent of total finished goods.
Percent of total intermediate materials.
Formerly titled "Crude materials for
further processing, excluding crude
foodstuffs and feedstuffs, plant and
animal fibers, oilseeds, and leaf tobacco."
Percent of total crude materials.

Table 2. Producer price indexes and percent changes for selected commodity groupings by stage of processing
(1982=100 unless otherwise indicated)
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
|
|
|Unadjusted
|
|
|
| percent
|Seasonally adjusted
|
|
Unadjusted index
|change to
|percent change from:
Commodity |
|
|Feb. 2006 from:|
code
|
Grouping
|_______________________|_______________|________________________
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Oct.
|Jan.
|Feb.
| Feb. | Jan. |Nov. to|Dec. to|Jan. to
|
|2005 1/|2006 1/|2006 1/| 2005 | 2006 | Dec. | Jan. | Feb.
___________|_______________________________________________________|_______|_______|_______|_______|_______|_______|_______|________
|
|
|FINISHED GOODS.........................................| 160.9
160.0
157.8
3.7
-1.4
0.6
0.3
-1.4
| FINISHED CONSUMER GOODS...............................| 167.1
165.8
162.7
4.5
-1.9
.9
.2
-1.9
| FINISHED CONSUMER FOODS..............................| 155.8
157.2
153.4
-1.3
-2.4
.8
.2
-2.7
|
|
01-11
|
Fresh fruits and melons 2/..........................| 95.3
95.7
88.9
-15.4
-7.1
3.4
-6.3
-7.1
01-13
|
Fresh and dry vegetables 2/.........................| 136.0
186.8
136.2
-3.5 -27.1
21.7
5.9
-27.1
01-71-07
|
Eggs for fresh use (Dec. 1991=100)..................| 74.5
96.9
73.1
-11.7 -24.6
4.3
.7
-23.1
02-11
|
Bakery products 2/..................................| 202.5
203.9
205.6
3.3
.8
.2
.3
.8
02-13
|
Milled rice 2/......................................| 120.6
131.9
131.0
8.7
-.7
1.2
7.5
-.7
02-14-02
|
Pasta products (June 1985=100) 2/...................| 127.9
127.9
127.9
.6
0
0
0
0
02-21-01
|
Beef and veal 2/....................................| 144.2
150.5
144.2
-4.4
-4.2
2.4
.8
-4.2
02-21-04
|
Pork................................................| 131.2
126.8
120.8
-10.5
-4.7
-.3
1.2
-6.0
02-22-03
|
Processed young chickens............................| 140.8
116.7
113.2
-17.1
-3.0
-3.7
-6.8
-8.2
02-22-06
|
Processed turkeys...................................| 109.6
102.6
95.1
-8.9
-7.3
3.9
-3.1
-6.2
02-23
|
Finfish and shellfish...............................| 241.8
223.3
216.3
-4.4
-3.1
3.5
-3.8
-3.1
02-3
|
Dairy products......................................| 155.5
152.6
149.2
-3.1
-2.2
.3
-.5
-1.8
02-4
|
Processed fruits and vegetables.....................| 141.0
144.6
144.8
4.2
.1
.3
1.3
.1
02-55
|
Confectionery end products 2/.......................| 206.6
202.8
200.1
-1.6
-1.3
-.7
-.6
-1.3
02-62
|
Soft drinks.........................................| 159.8
163.5
163.3
3.6
-.1
-.2
1.0
1.0
02-63-01
|
Roasted coffee 2/...................................| 152.5
152.3
152.3
6.8
0
-.1
.1
0
02-78
|
Shortening and cooking oils 2/......................| 179.4
178.7
178.5
3.3
-.1
-4.9
3.8
-.1
|
|
| FINISHED CONSUMER GOODS EXCLUDING FOODS..............| 171.2
168.7
166.0
6.8
-1.6
.9
.2
-1.6
|
|
02-61
|
Alcoholic beverages.................................| 159.1
160.2
160.7
1.8
.3
-.1
.3
.2
03-81-06
|
Women's, girls', & infants' apparel (12/03=100) 2/..| 100.6
100.5
100.6
-.4
.1
.1
-.4
.1
03-81-07
|
Men's and boys' apparel (Dec. 2003=100) 2/..........| 98.0
98.3
97.6
-1.0
-.7
-.2
-.1
-.7
03-82
|
Textile housefurnishings 2/.........................| 122.2
122.6
122.6
-.6
0
.1
.2
0
04-3
|
Footwear 2/.........................................| 148.5
148.9
148.7
.7
-.1
-.1
0
-.1
05-41
|
Residential electric power (Dec. 1990=100)..........| 129.8
133.3
133.3
8.8
0
.2
3.0
0
05-51
|
Residential gas (Dec. 1990=100).....................| 254.0
261.1
245.9
25.6
-5.8
-1.8
.8
-4.1
05-71
|
Gasoline............................................| 207.6
179.7
162.7
18.4
-9.5
7.2
-3.5
-11.0
05-73-02-01|
Home heating oil and distillates....................| 237.9
186.1
184.0
29.0
-1.1
3.5
-1.0
-1.1
06-38
|
Pharmaceutical preparations (June 2001=100) 2/......| 119.4
122.2
123.0
7.1
.7
.6
.6
.7
06-71
|
Soaps and synthetic detergents 2/...................| 134.1
135.2
135.2
.5
0
.1
.1
0
06-75
|
Cosmetics and other toilet preparations 2/..........| 143.3
143.9
144.1
1.3
.1
.1
0
.1
07-12
|
Tires, tubes, tread, etc 2/.........................| 109.4
111.5
111.4
4.8
-.1
1.5
-.4
-.1
09-15-01
|
Sanitary paper products 2/..........................| 155.6
157.2
158.2
3.3
.6
-1.1
.6
.6
09-31-01
|
Newspaper circulation...............................| 242.6
245.5
245.9
2.4
.2
1.4
-.3
0
09-32-01
|
Periodical circulation 2/...........................| 226.3
225.9
231.1
3.0
2.3
-.4
.1
2.3
09-33
|
Book publishing 2/..................................| 266.9
272.3
271.7
4.0
-.2
.5
1.5
-.2
12-1
|
Household furniture 2/..............................| 167.4
170.6
171.0
3.7
.2
2.3
-.8
.2
12-3
|
Floor coverings 2/..................................| 147.7
153.9
155.1
9.4
.8
.3
.9
.8
12-4
|
Household appliances 2/.............................| 103.4
104.0
104.2
1.1
.2
.2
.3
.2
12-5
|
Home electronic equipment 2/........................| 61.0
62.0
62.0
-3.1
0
.5
-1.1
0
12-62
|
Household glassware.................................| 174.3
169.6
170.9
-.9
.8
.2
-5.6
.2
12-64
|
Household flatware 2/...............................| 148.3
149.0
148.8
2.1
-.1
(3)
.5
-.1
12-66
|
Lawn and garden equip., ex. tractors 2/.............| 134.2
133.9
134.0
-.9
.1
.1
.1
.1
14-11-01
|
Passenger cars......................................| 132.5
131.6
130.1
-2.8
-1.1
-.1
1.1
-.8
15-11
|
Toys, games, and children's vehicles 2/.............| 127.0
127.0
127.2
.2
.2
0
0
.2
15-12
|
Sporting and athletic goods 2/......................| 123.9
124.7
124.3
-.2
-.3
-1.3
.5
-.3
15-2
|
Tobacco products 2/.................................| 459.2
458.8
461.0
1.5
.5
0
-.4
.5
15-5
|
Mobile homes 2/.....................................| 203.8
206.2
206.8
4.9
.3
.4
.6
.3
15-94-02
|
Jewelry, platinum, & karat gold 2/..................| 140.6
145.0
147.2
7.1
1.5
.1
2.7
1.5
15-94-04
|
Costume jewelry and novelties 2/....................| 153.5
153.6
153.6
.1
0
0
.1
0
|
|
| CAPITAL EQUIPMENT.....................................| 145.9
146.0
146.2
1.6
.1
.1
.3
.1
|
|
11-1
|
Agricultural machinery and equipment 2/.............| 174.9
177.1
177.3
2.1
.1
-.1
.5
.1
11-2
|
Construction machinery and equipment 2/.............| 170.1
173.0
175.4
6.6
1.4
.1
1.2
1.4
11-37
|
Metal cutting machine tools 2/......................| 154.8
156.6
162.8
5.6
4.0
.3
.3
4.0
11-38
|
Metal forming machine tools 2/......................| 179.9
180.6
182.2
2.2
.9
-.1
.4
.9
11-39
|
Tools, dies, jigs, fixtures, and ind. molds 2/......| 143.3
142.8
143.2
2.3
.3
-.6
.3
.3
11-41
|
Pumps, compressors, and equipment...................| 181.0
182.8
183.8
4.8
.5
.5
-.1
.4
11-44
|
Industrial material handling equipment 2/...........| 152.2
152.8
153.2
3.5
.3
.5
-.1
.3
11-51
|
Electronic computers (Dec. 2004=100) 2/.............| 79.5
75.8
73.1
-22.6
-3.6
-2.4
-1.7
-3.6
11-62
|
Textile machinery 2/................................| 162.3
162.5
162.4
2.5
-.1
-.1
.1
-.1
11-64
|
Paper industries machinery (June 1982=100) 2/.......| 180.1
179.8
180.5
2.4
.4
0
.2
.4
11-65
|
Printing trades machinery 2/........................| 145.0
145.0
145.3
.9
.2
0
0
.2
11-74
|
Transformers and power regulators 2/................| 152.9
158.9
159.5
9.7
.4
1.4
-.5
.4
11-76
|
Communication & related equip. (Dec. 1985=100) 2/...| 102.4
102.4
102.4
-.2
0
.6
-.1
0
11-79-05
|
X-ray and electromedical equipment 2/...............| 95.0
94.9
94.9
-1.4
0
-.1
.1
0
11-91
|
Oil field and gas field machinery ..................| 157.9
164.7
165.8
10.5
.7
1.3
-.6
.7
11-92
|
Mining machinery and equipment 2/...................| 178.6
181.7
185.8
7.8
2.3
2.0
1.6
2.3
11-93
|
Office and store machines and equipment 2/..........| 115.2
114.9
114.6
-.6
-.3
-.5
-.2
-.3
12-2
|
Commercial furniture 2/.............................| 174.5
176.0
175.2
2.7
-.5
.1
.5
-.5
14-11-05
|
Light motor trucks..................................| 153.7
147.5
147.2
-2.6
-.2
-.7
.7
.5
14-11-06
|
Heavy motor trucks 2/...............................| 165.7
165.8
165.8
4.1
0
0
.1
0
14-14
|
Truck trailers 2/...................................| 159.0
159.7
161.3
4.7
1.0
.4
-.2
1.0
14-21-02
|
Civilian aircraft (Dec. 1985=100)...................| 204.8
207.0
207.7
4.3
.3
.2
.7
.4
14-31
|
Ships (Dec. 1985=100) 2/............................| 180.3
179.3
181.4
4.7
1.2
.8
-1.9
1.2
14-4
|
Railroad equipment 2/...............................| 161.7
163.3
165.4
6.0
1.3
0
.9
1.3
|
|
|INTERMEDIATE MATERIALS, SUPPLIES, AND COMPONENTS.......| 162.5
161.7
161.0
8.2
-.4
.1
1.2
-.3
|
|
| INTERMEDIATE FOODS AND FEEDS..........................| 134.4
135.0
133.5
1.4
-1.1
-.1
.9
-1.2
|
|
02-12-03
|
Flour 2/............................................| 134.6
133.2
137.9
3.2
3.5
-1.9
-1.2
3.5
02-53
|
Refined sugar and byproducts 2/.....................| 127.9
144.6
148.9
23.0
3.0
2.2
4.2
3.0
02-54
|
Confectionery materials.............................| 127.5
133.6
132.3
4.4
-1.0
.5
5.3
-1.9
02-64-01-11|
Soft drink beverage bases (Dec. 1985=100) 2/........| 181.1
182.6
181.5
1.5
-.6
-1.0
.8
-.6
02-9
|
Prepared animal feeds 2/............................| 116.0
117.6
117.1
6.0
-.4
.4
2.5
-.4
|
|
| INTERMEDIATE MATERIALS LESS FOODS AND FEEDS...........| 163.8
163.0
162.4
8.5
-.4
.1
1.2
-.4
|
|
03-1
|
Synthetic fibers 2/.................................| 113.9
113.8
115.1
5.6
1.1
-.2
-.3
1.1
03-2
|
Processed yarns and threads 2/......................| 113.3
112.7
113.7
3.4
.9
-.8
.2
.9
03-3
|
Gray fabrics 2/.....................................| 116.0
118.9
120.5
5.7
1.3
-.9
2.3
1.3
03-4
|
Finished fabrics 2/.................................| 125.1
125.6
126.3
2.8
.6
-.1
-.2
.6
03-83-03
|
Industrial textile products 2/......................| 135.3
136.8
136.4
1.9
-.3
.1
.4
-.3
04-2
|
Leather 2/..........................................| 219.3
219.0
219.5
0
.2
0
0
.2
05-32
|
Liquefied petroleum gas 2/..........................| 309.3
270.7
232.0
12.9 -14.3
8.1
-6.8
-14.3
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
See footnotes at end of table.

Table 2. Producer price indexes and percent changes for selected commodity groupings by stage of processing - Continued
(1982=100 unless otherwise indicated)
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
|
|
|Unadjusted
|
|
|
| percent
|Seasonally adjusted
|
|
Unadjusted index
|change to
|percent change from:
Commodity |
|
|Feb. 2006 from:|
code
|
Grouping
|_______________________|_______________|________________________
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Oct.
|Jan.
|Feb.
| Feb. | Jan. |Nov. to|Dec. to|Jan. to
|
|2005 1/|2006 1/|2006 1/| 2005 | 2006 | Dec. | Jan. | Feb.
___________|_______________________________________________________|_______|_______|_______|_______|_______|_______|_______|________
|
|
| INTERMEDIATE MATERIALS LESS FOODS AND FEEDS
|
|
-Continued..........................................|
05-42
|
Commercial electric power...........................| 152.6
160.4
157.7
10.8
-1.7
0.4
4.5
-1.0
05-43
|
Industrial electric power...........................| 159.5
168.6
168.1
13.6
-.3
-.1
4.2
-.2
05-52
|
Commercial natural gas (Dec. 1990=100)..............| 279.3
285.1
267.3
29.1
-6.2
-1.4
.7
-4.4
05-53
|
Industrial natural gas (Dec. 1990=100)..............| 317.0
305.5
281.0
32.6
-8.0
-4.1
5.7
-7.0
05-54
|
Natural gas to electric utilities (Dec. 1990=100)...| 259.8
234.9
224.9
22.4
-4.3
-12.1
-.4
-6.5
05-72-03
|
Jet fuels...........................................| 258.4
185.8
185.5
39.6
-.2
-3.7
3.4
3.0
05-73-03
|
No. 2 Diesel fuel...................................| 264.1
196.6
195.8
31.0
-.4
2.8
-.2
-2.5
05-74
|
Residual fuels 2/...................................| 203.5
179.1
181.6
67.5
1.4
-5.4
-3.6
1.4
06-1
|
Industrial chemicals 2/.............................| 209.7
206.3
208.4
16.3
1.0
1.1
5.6
1.0
06-21
|
Prepared paint......................................| 189.2
196.1
197.1
6.7
.5
.2
1.1
.3
06-22
|
Paint materials 2/..................................| 189.8
199.5
201.6
6.5
1.1
.1
1.5
1.1
06-31
|
Medicinal and botanical chemicals 2/................| 136.9
137.2
139.4
3.1
1.6
.1
0
1.6
06-4
|
Fats and oils, inedible 2/..........................| 149.8
144.3
140.3
1.9
-2.8
-5.1
1.9
-2.8
06-51
|
Mixed fertilizers...................................| 144.6
146.6
145.4
7.4
-.8
.3
.6
-1.6
06-52-01
|
Nitrogenates........................................| 212.9
225.7
221.3
21.7
-1.9
-.2
-1.9
-3.4
06-52-02
|
Phosphates 2/.......................................| 129.7
130.8
129.7
2.7
-.8
-.2
-2.4
-.8
06-53
|
Other agricultural chemicals 2/.....................| 153.0
150.8
153.7
2.7
1.9
-.7
-1.3
1.9
06-6
|
Plastic resins and materials 2/.....................| 203.9
204.8
205.7
7.8
.4
-1.2
-.8
.4
07-11-02
|
Synthetic rubber 2/.................................| 155.4
159.1
164.3
12.1
3.3
-.3
.8
3.3
07-21
|
Plastic construction products 2/....................| 167.1
184.4
184.5
21.8
.1
1.4
1.1
.1
07-22
|
Unsupported plastic film, sheet, & other shapes 2/..| 168.9
179.8
177.3
9.6
-1.4
-.2
-.1
-1.4
07-26
|
Plastic parts and components for manufacturing 2/...| 120.1
128.2
128.0
8.9
-.2
-1.8
.4
-.2
08-11
|
Softwood lumber 2/..................................| 199.3
205.2
207.9
-2.5
1.3
1.6
4.9
1.3
08-12
|
Hardwood lumber 2/..................................| 196.8
196.7
196.8
-.4
.1
0
-.2
.1
08-2
|
Millwork............................................| 198.6
200.2
201.0
2.6
.4
.7
.4
.2
08-3
|
Plywood 2/..........................................| 211.6
181.9
180.4
-5.8
-.8
-.2
.9
-.8
09-11
|
Woodpulp 2/.........................................| 137.1
138.0
140.0
2.6
1.4
.7
-.1
1.4
09-13
|
Paper 2/............................................| 161.7
163.3
163.8
5.2
.3
-.1
.7
.3
09-14
|
Paperboard 2/.......................................| 168.6
174.4
183.6
2.0
5.3
-.4
.7
5.3
09-15-03
|
Paper boxes and containers 2/.......................| 181.9
184.8
185.7
.8
.5
.5
.1
.5
09-2
|
Building paper and board 2/.........................| 206.6
185.0
180.0
-9.3
-2.7
4.3
3.7
-2.7
09-37
|
Commercial printing (June 1982=100) 2/..............| 162.6
164.0
164.5
2.5
.3
.4
.4
.3
10-15
|
Foundry and forge shop products 2/..................| 155.6
159.7
160.9
3.1
.8
.5
1.6
.8
10-17
|
Steel mill products 2/..............................| 155.6
160.4
160.6
-5.5
.1
.4
-.2
.1
10-22
|
Primary nonferrous metals 2/........................| 167.4
192.9
200.0
33.1
3.7
7.0
3.8
3.7
10-25-01
|
Aluminum mill shapes 2/.............................| 160.8
169.7
173.8
8.8
2.4
1.5
1.3
2.4
10-25-02
|
Copper and brass mill shapes 2/.....................| 254.6
281.9
297.3
36.4
5.5
5.2
1.2
5.5
10-26
|
Nonferrous wire and cable 2/........................| 175.1
190.5
193.9
20.4
1.8
4.5
-.3
1.8
10-3
|
Metal containers 2/.................................| 124.7
128.5
127.7
6.0
-.6
.6
2.6
-.6
10-4
|
Hardware 2/.........................................| 170.3
171.2
171.3
3.2
.1
.1
.3
.1
10-5
|
Plumbing fixtures and brass fittings................| 197.7
201.6
201.5
2.3
0
0
.5
-.5
10-6
|
Heating equipment 2/................................| 180.2
180.9
183.2
2.1
1.3
.1
.4
1.3
10-7
|
Fabricated structural metal products 2/.............| 175.7
177.3
177.9
2.1
.3
.3
.1
.3
10-88
|
Fabricated ferrous wire products (June 1982=100) 2/.| 156.7
158.2
159.3
1.1
.7
0
.5
.7
10-89
|
Other misc. metal products 2/.......................| 137.3
138.3
138.7
2.4
.3
.1
.6
.3
11-45
|
Mechanical power transmission equipment.............| 191.5
193.8
194.1
4.0
.2
-.2
.2
.1
11-48
|
Air conditioning and refrigeration equipment 2/.....| 148.4
147.2
147.2
2.2
0
.1
.3
0
11-49-02
|
Metal valves, ex.fluid power (Dec. 1982=100)........| 192.7
193.5
197.8
5.8
2.2
.4
.5
1.9
11-49-05
|
Ball and roller bearings 2/.........................| 189.8
190.4
191.0
5.4
.3
.1
.2
.3
11-71
|
Wiring devices 2/...................................| 178.6
192.1
186.2
7.4
-3.1
.3
2.5
-3.1
11-73
|
Motors, generators, motor generator sets............| 158.6
161.3
161.0
2.8
-.2
.1
.6
-.3
11-75
|
Switchgear, switchboard, etc., equipment............| 172.8
175.0
175.7
4.6
.4
.1
.9
.5
11-78
|
Electronic components and accessories 2/............| 86.6
85.2
84.6
-3.9
-.7
-1.0
.4
-.7
11-94
|
Internal combustion engines 2/......................| 148.5
149.8
151.2
2.9
.9
.3
.7
.9
11-95
|
Machine shop products 2/............................| 151.3
152.2
152.3
1.3
.1
.1
.4
.1
13-11
|
Flat glass 2/.......................................| 111.6
113.0
112.1
2.1
-.8
.2
.6
-.8
13-22
|
Cement..............................................| 181.5
188.3
194.0
14.2
3.0
.5
3.5
3.2
13-3
|
Concrete products...................................| 180.9
187.8
188.3
9.3
.3
-.3
1.9
.4
13-6
|
Asphalt felts and coatings..........................| 136.5
145.1
141.8
16.2
-2.3
1.2
3.8
-2.4
13-7
|
Gypsum products 2/..................................| 243.2
256.9
268.7
24.6
4.6
2.5
2.5
4.6
13-8
|
Glass containers....................................| 146.9
149.3
150.3
2.7
.7
.2
.7
.9
14-12
|
Motor vehicle parts 2/..............................| 113.4
114.5
114.9
1.8
.3
.2
.6
.3
14-23
|
Aircraft engines & engine parts (Dec. 1985=100).....| 166.4
169.8
170.0
2.7
.1
.1
.5
-.1
14-25
|
Aircraft parts & aux.equip.,nec (June 1985=100) 2/..| 156.5
157.0
157.0
2.3
0
.2
.3
0
15-42
|
Photographic supplies 2/............................| 120.7
121.3
121.1
1.9
-.2
-.4
.3
-.2
15-6
|
Medical/surgical/personal aid devices...............| 159.6
160.9
160.2
1.0
-.4
.3
.1
-.5
|
|
| CRUDE MATERIALS FOR FURTHER PROCESSING................| 211.6
201.4
183.5
12.9
-8.9
-2.3
-.5
-9.2
|
|
| CRUDE FOODSTUFFS AND FEEDSTUFFS......................| 120.8
119.3
116.6
-4.0
-2.3
2.5
-3.0
-3.0
|
|
01-21
|
Wheat 2/............................................| 109.2
103.5
107.8
6.5
4.2
-2.3
-.4
4.2
01-22-02
|
Corn 2/.............................................| 62.6
77.8
79.2
4.8
1.8
10.0
2.2
1.8
01-31
|
Slaughter cattle 2/.................................| 130.7
135.2
131.6
-.2
-2.7
4.1
-2.1
-2.7
01-32
|
Slaughter hogs......................................| 84.0
68.1
70.0
-13.8
2.8
3.2
-13.1
-5.1
01-41-02
|
Slaughter broilers/fryers 2/........................| 171.9
152.5
151.3
-16.3
-.8
-6.2
-2.7
-.8
01-42
|
Slaughter turkeys...................................| 152.9
122.0
115.3
4.5
-5.5
3.7
-10.5
-3.3
01-6
|
Fluid milk..........................................| 116.1
109.4
103.3
-11.0
-5.6
-.5
0
-4.1
01-83-01-31|
Soybeans 2/.........................................| 88.5
96.3
96.7
5.5
.4
3.3
-4.6
.4
02-52-01-03|
Cane sugar, raw (Dec. 2003=100) 2/..................| 118.8
123.1
125.8
25.4
2.2
.7
2.9
2.2
|
|
| CRUDE NONFOOD MATERIALS..............................| 276.5
259.9
230.4
21.5 -11.4
-4.0
.5
-11.5
|
|
01-51
|
Raw cotton 2/.......................................| 85.7
82.6
80.5
11.8
-2.5
-.5
1.3
-2.5
04-1
|
Hides and skins (June 2001=100) 2/..................| 188.2
186.4
187.9
-2.5
.8
-1.7
.2
.8
05-1
|
Coal 2/.............................................| 117.5
127.4
127.8
12.0
.3
0
10.1
.3
05-31
|
Natural gas 2/......................................| 492.7
422.3
321.0
26.8 -24.0
-11.4
-1.4
-24.0
05-61
|
Crude petroleum 2/..................................| 170.4
168.7
160.0
29.1
-5.2
7.9
2.6
-5.2
08-5
|
Logs, timber, etc 2/................................| 195.5
195.9
198.1
-.2
1.1
.7
-1.3
1.1
09-12
|
Wastepaper..........................................| 224.6
214.2
212.0
-11.8
-1.0
-.6
1.6
-3.6
10-11
|
Iron ore 2/.........................................| 119.0
123.1
133.0
16.6
8.0
-.1
3.4
8.0
10-12
|
Iron and steel scrap................................| 288.5
296.1
321.8
3.9
8.7
-1.4
-8.4
7.1
10-21
|
Nonferrous metal ores (Dec. 1983=100) 2/............| 163.1
172.3
173.8
27.6
.9
7.2
1.2
.9
10-23-01
|
Copper base scrap 2/................................| 287.2
332.7
347.8
59.4
4.5
-3.6
6.7
4.5
10-23-02
|
Aluminum base scrap.................................| 208.0
240.4
268.9
30.3
11.9
3.4
7.4
9.5
13-21
|
Construction sand, gravel, and crushed stone........| 198.5
204.3
207.3
8.1
1.5
.3
1.3
1.3
13-99-01
|
Industrial sand.....................................| 174.2
183.8
182.6
6.1
-.7
-.2
.4
-1.1
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
1/

The indexes for October 2005 have been recalculated to incorporate late
reports and corrections by respondents. All indexes are subject to
revision 4 months after original publication.

2/
3/

Not seasonally adjusted.
Not available.

Table 3. Producer Price Indexes for selected commodity groupings
(1982=100 unless otherwise indicated)
_______________________________________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
|
Unadjusted index 1/
|
Commodity|
|___________________________________|
code
|
Grouping
| Oct. 2005 | Jan. 2006 | Feb. 2006 |
_________|________________________________________________|___________|___________|___________|
|
|
|
|
|
| Finished Goods (1967=100)......................|
451.7
|
449.0
|
442.9
|
| All commodities................................|
166.2
|
164.6
|
161.9
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
MAJOR COMMODITY GROUPS
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Farm products and processed foods and feeds....|
140.8
|
141.3
|
138.4
|
01
|
Farm products................................|
115.7
|
117.5
|
112.0
|
02
|
Processed foods and feeds....................|
153.9
|
153.7
|
152.1
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Industrial commodities.........................|
170.6
|
168.6
|
166.0
|
03
|
Textile products and apparel.................|
123.3
|
123.9
|
124.2
|
04
|
Hides, skins, leather, and related products..|
165.3
|
165.1
|
165.5
|
05
|
Fuels and related products and power.........|
190.7
|
176.9
|
164.1
|
06
|
Chemicals and allied products 2/.............|
202.3
|
203.1
|
204.6
|
07
|
Rubber and plastic products..................|
146.8
|
153.5
|
153.8
|
08
|
Lumber and wood products.....................|
198.0
|
197.3
|
198.5
|
09
|
Pulp, paper, and allied products.............|
203.5
|
205.4
|
206.9
|
10
|
Metals and metal products....................|
161.9
|
167.7
|
170.6
|
11
|
Machinery and equipment......................|
123.9
|
124.1
|
124.1
|
12
|
Furniture and household durables.............|
140.0
|
142.0
|
142.2
|
13
|
Nonmetallic mineral products.................|
167.4
|
173.2
|
174.5
|
14
|
Transportation equipment.....................|
152.9
|
152.5
|
152.4
|
15
|
Miscellaneous products.......................|
198.0
|
202.7
|
202.9
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Industrial commodities less fuels and related |
|
|
|
|
products and power...........................|
160.5
|
162.4
|
163.2
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
OTHER COMMODITY GROUPINGS
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
01-1
| Fruits and melons, fresh and dry vegetables,
|
|
|
|
|
and tree nuts................................|
125.8
|
146.0
|
119.9
|
01-2
| Grains.........................................|
76.1
|
85.1
|
87.2
|
01-3
| Slaughter livestock............................|
118.8
|
117.5
|
115.5
|
01-4
| Slaughter poultry..............................|
165.6
|
144.4
|
142.1
|
01-5
| Plant and animal fibers........................|
86.3
|
83.2
|
81.0
|
01-7
| Chicken eggs...................................|
87.1
|
108.2
|
81.9
|
01-8
| Hay, hayseeds, and oilseeds....................|
115.9
|
120.0
|
120.9
|
01-83
| Oilseeds.......................................|
98.5
|
106.2
|
106.1
|
01-9
| Other farm products............................|
|
|
|
02-1
| Cereal and bakery products.....................|
177.6
|
180.0
|
181.3
|
02-2
| Meats, poultry, and fish.......................|
143.6
|
140.0
|
135.4
|
02-22
| Processed poultry..............................|
131.5
|
117.2
|
114.3
|
02-5
| Sugar and confectionery........................|
162.7
|
166.0
|
165.5
|
02-6
| Beverages and beverage materials...............|
159.7
|
161.8
|
161.9
|
02-63
| Packaged beverage materials....................|
151.4
|
151.6
|
151.6
|
02-7
| Fats and oils..................................|
178.4
|
171.5
|
170.4
|
03-81
| Apparel........................................|
125.5
|
125.8
|
125.6
|
04-4
| Other leather and related products.............|
151.9
|
152.1
|
152.4
|
05-3
| Gas fuels......................................|
447.6
|
384.6
|
296.8
|
05-4
| Electric power.................................|
153.5
|
159.8
|
158.8
|
05-7
| Refined petroleum products.....................|
214.9
|
177.2
|
169.7
|
06-3
| Drugs and pharmaceuticals......................|
301.6
|
307.1
|
309.7
|
06-5
| Agricultural chemicals and products............|
157.8
|
159.8
|
159.8
|
06-7
| Other chemicals and allied products............|
153.5
|
155.8
|
156.8
|
07-1
| Rubber and rubber products.....................|
131.4
|
134.2
|
134.9
|
07-11
| Rubber, except natural rubber..................|
154.6
|
158.3
|
163.5
|
07-13
| Miscellaneous rubber products..................|
147.6
|
150.8
|
150.6
|
07-2
| Plastic products...............................|
157.4
|
166.0
|
166.2
|
08-1
| Lumber.........................................|
195.8
|
199.7
|
201.5
|
09-1
| Pulp, paper, and products, excluding building |
|
|
|
|
paper and board..............................|
169.3
|
172.2
|
173.9
|
09-15
| Converted paper and paperboard products........|
176.3
|
180.0
|
180.7
|
10-1
| Iron and steel.................................|
168.0
|
172.3
|
175.4
|
10-2
| Nonferrous metals..............................|
171.6
|
186.9
|
194.0
|
10-25
| Nonferrous mill shapes.........................|
170.9
|
181.6
|
189.6
|
11-3
| Metalworking machinery and equipment...........|
158.6
|
159.8
|
160.9
|
11-4
| General purpose machinery and equipment........|
170.7
|
171.6
|
172.3
|
11-6
| Special industry machinery.....................|
174.9
|
175.9
|
176.4
|
11-7
| Electrical machinery and equipment.............|
113.0
|
112.6
|
112.2
|
11-9
| Miscellaneous machinery and equipment..........|
146.0
|
147.3
|
148.4
|
12-6
| Other household durable goods..................|
163.5
|
163.7
|
164.5
|
13-2
| Concrete ingredients...........................|
188.9
|
195.0
|
199.0
|
14-1
| Motor vehicles and equipment...................|
133.3
|
132.1
|
131.8
|
15-1
| Toys, sporting goods, small arms, etc..........|
134.0
|
134.7
|
134.9
|
15-4
| Photographic equipment and supplies............|
106.0
|
106.3
|
106.2
|
15-9
| Other miscellaneous products...................|
148.0
|
150.8
|
150.2
|
__________________________________________________________|___________|___________|___________|
1/
2/

Data for October 2005 have been revised to reflect the availability of late reports and
corrections by respondents. All data are subject to revision 4 months after original
publication.
Prices of some items in this grouping are lagged 1 month.

Table 4. Producer price indexes for the net output of selected industries and industry groups, not seasonally
adjusted
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
Index
| Percent change
Industry
|
Industry 1/
|Index|_______________________|to_Feb._2006_from:__
code
|
|base |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Oct.
|Jan.
|Feb.
| Feb. | Jan.
|
|
|2005 2/|2006 2/|2006 2/| 2005 | 2006
__________________|______________________________________________|_____|_______|_______|_______|________|___________
|
|
|
|Total mining industries...................... |12/84| 254.3
237.7
207.3
24.7
-12.8
211
| Oil and gas extraction...................... |12/85| 352.8
314.9
259.0
25.9
-17.8
212
| Mining (except oil & gas)................... |12/03| 130.4
136.2
138.2
14.2
1.5
213
| Mining support activities................... |12/03| 144.7
161.5
162.5
33.0
.6
|
|
|
|Total manufacturing industries............... |12/84| 156.6
154.1
153.5
4.4
-.4
311
| Food mfg.................................... |12/84| 146.7
146.5
145.0
0
-1.0
312
| Beverage & tobacco mfg...................... |12/03| 105.2
106.2
106.5
2.4
.3
313
| Textile mills............................... |12/03| 104.6
105.5
106.1
3.6
.6
314
| Textile product mills....................... |12/03| 105.9
108.1
108.4
4.6
.3
315
| Apparel manufacturing....................... |12/03| 99.9
100.4
100.2
0
-.2
316
| Leather & allied product mfg................ |12/84| 144.7
145.0
145.2
.7
.1
321
| Wood products manufacturing................. |12/03| 110.7
109.8
110.2
1.3
.4
322
| Paper manufacturing......................... |12/03| 106.5
108.1
109.1
2.4
.9
323
| Printing and related support activities..... |12/03| 103.7
104.7
105.1
2.6
.4
324
| Petroleum and coal products mfg............. |12/84| 259.5
215.6
206.3
26.1
-4.3
325
| Chemical mfg................................ |12/84| 191.2
195.0
197.1
7.5
1.1
326
| Plastics and rubber products mfg............ |12/84| 143.7
149.5
149.6
8.1
.1
327
| Nonmetallic mineral product mfg............. |12/84| 154.3
158.9
160.4
7.7
.9
331
| Primary metal mfg........................... |12/84| 155.8
162.3
165.0
3.4
1.7
332
| Fabricated metal product mfg................ |12/84| 150.5
151.9
152.4
2.8
.3
333
| Machinery mfg............................... |12/03| 106.3
107.3
107.7
3.1
.4
334
| Computer & electronic product mfg........... |12/03| 97.0
96.5
96.4
-1.8
-.1
335
| Electrical equip, appliance & component mfg. |12/03| 109.0
112.2
112.3
5.3
.1
336
| Transportation equipment mfg................ |12/03| 103.9
103.3
103.1
.5
-.2
337
| Furniture & related product mfg............. |12/84| 159.2
160.9
161.0
3.1
.1
339
| Miscellaneous mfg........................... |12/03| 103.3
104.2
103.9
1.4
-.3
|
|
|
|Wholesale trade industries
|
|
423
| Merchant wholesalers, durable goods......... |06/04| 102.3
103.9
105.0
1.4
1.1
424
| Merchant wholesalers, nondurable goods...... |06/05| 99.7
100.1
102.2
(3)
2.1
425
| Wholesale trade agents and brokers.......... |06/05| 99.2
101.6
101.9
(3)
.3
|
|
|
|Retail trade industries
|
|
441
| Motor vehicle and parts dealers............. |12/03| 107.4
107.6
108.6
1.8
.9
442
| Furniture and home furnishings stores....... |12/03| 115.1
115.6
114.0
6.9
-1.4
443
| Electronics and appliance stores............ |12/03| 100.2
97.1
92.1
-8.1
-5.1
444
| Bldg material and garden equip and supp
|
|
| dealers.................................... |12/03| 110.6
110.4
113.7
2.5
3.0
445
| Food and beverage stores.................... |12/99| 135.0
133.7
132.4
1.9
-1.0
446
| Health and personal care stores............. |12/03| 107.0
114.1
115.0
8.9
.8
447
| Gasoline stations........................... |06/01| 64.6
44.4
61.0
22.5
37.4
448
| Clothing and clothing accessories stores.... |12/03| 103.9
102.5
100.3
-2.1
-2.1
451
| Sporting goods, hobby, book and music stores |12/03| 96.5
98.1
97.2
-.4
-.9
452
| General merchandise stores.................. |12/03| 108.2
104.7
105.7
-2.3
1.0
454
| Nonstore retailers.......................... |12/03| 122.0
125.8
124.8
1.8
-.8
|
|
|
|Transportation and warehousing
|
|
481
| Air transportation.......................... |12/92| 173.7
178.2
178.6
8.6
.2
482
| Rail transportation......................... |12/96| 130.6
131.2
130.9
10.6
-.2
483
| Water transportation........................ |12/03| 109.7
108.4
109.9
5.4
1.4
484
| Truck transportation........................ |12/03| 112.1
111.3
111.1
4.7
-.2
486110
| Pipeline transportation of crude oil........ |06/86| 127.9
130.9
130.9
6.3
0
486910
| Pipeline transportation of refined petroleum |
|
| products................................... |06/86| 121.7
121.9
121.9
2.9
0
488
| Transportation support activities........... |12/03| 106.1
105.6
105.9
3.2
.3
491
| Postal service.............................. |06/89| 155.0
164.7
164.7
6.3
0
492
| Couriers and messengers..................... |12/03| 115.4
120.2
120.2
7.2
0
|
|
|
|Utilities
|
|
221
| Utilities................................... |12/03| 131.2
131.2
127.1
18.2
-3.1
|
|
|
|Health care and social assistance
|
|
6211
| Offices of physicians....................... |12/96| 116.7
116.5
116.7
.7
.2
6215
| Medical and diagnostic laboratories......... |12/03| 104.4
104.4
104.4
.2
0
6216
| Home health care services................... |12/96| 121.6
122.0
122.0
.8
0
622
| Hospitals................................... |12/92| 149.5
150.5
151.0
3.7
.3
6231
| Nursing care facilities..................... |12/03| 107.5
107.6
107.9
2.4
.3
62321
| Residential mental retardation facilities... |12/03| 104.7
105.5
105.6
1.8
.1
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
See footnotes at end of table.

Table 4. Producer price indexes for the net output of selected industries and industry groups, not seasonally
adjusted - Continued
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
Index
| Percent change
Industry
|
Industry 1/
|Index|_______________________|to_Feb._2006_from:__
code
|
|base |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|Oct.
|Jan.
|Feb.
| Feb. | Jan.
|
|
|2005 2/|2006 2/|2006 2/| 2005 | 2006
__________________|______________________________________________|_____|_______|_______|_______|________|___________
|
|
|
|Other services industries
|
|
511
| Publishing industries, except Internet...... |12/03| 104.9
105.4
105.9
2.4
0.5
515
| Broadcasting, except Internet............... |12/03| 104.6
100.5
100.3
-.2
-.2
517
| Telecommunications.......................... |12/03| 97.7
97.3
97.0
-1.1
-.3
5182
| Data processing and related services........ |12/03| 99.0
99.0
99.4
.6
.4
5221
| Depository credit intermediation............ |12/03| 106.6
110.2
109.4
8.6
-.7
523
| Security, commodity contracts and like
|
|
| activity................................... |12/03| 110.3
112.4
112.7
2.6
.3
524
| Insurance carriers and related activities... |12/03| 105.1
105.5
105.7
1.9
.2
5312
| Offices of real estate agents and brokers... |12/03| 110.5
110.3
110.7
4.4
.4
5321
| Automotive equipment rental and leasing..... |06/01| 111.0
113.5
115.3
7.9
1.6
5411
| Legal services.............................. |12/96| 139.6
143.1
143.9
5.0
.6
541211
| Offices of certified public accountants..... |12/03| 104.0
103.5
106.8
3.9
3.2
5413
| Architectural, engineering and related
|
|
| services................................... |12/96| 130.0
131.3
132.9
3.3
1.2
54181
| Advertising agencies........................ |12/03| 101.8
104.4
104.6
3.6
.2
5613
| Employment services......................... |12/96| 117.3
117.9
118.3
2.2
.3
56151
| Travel agencies............................. |12/03| 96.7
99.0
98.7
5.3
-.3
56172
| Janitorial services......................... |12/03| 101.8
102.7
102.7
.9
0
5621
| Waste collection............................ |12/03| 103.4
103.4
104.6
3.1
1.2
721
| Accommodation............................... |12/96| 133.1
133.2
131.5
1.9
-1.3
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
1/ Indexes in this table are derived from the net-output-weighted industry price indexes. Because of differences
in coverage and aggregation methodology, they will generally not match the movements of similarly titled
indexes which are derived from traditional commodity groupings.
2/ The indexes for October 2005 have been recalculated to incorporate late reports and corrections by respondents.
All indexes are subject to revision 4 months after original publication.
3/ Not available.
Note: NAICS 2002 replaced the SIC system beginning with the release of PPI data for January 2004.

Table 5. Producer price indexes by stage of processing, seasonally adjusted
(1982=100)
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________
|
|
Index 1/
|_____________________________________________________
Grouping
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Sep. | Oct. | Nov. | Dec. | Jan. | Feb.
| 2005 | 2005 | 2005 | 2005 | 2006 | 2006
_______________________________________________________|________|________|________|________|________|________
|
Finished goods...................................| 158.4
159.6
159.0
160.0
160.4
158.2
Finished consumer goods........................| 164.0
165.6
164.7
166.1
166.4
163.3
Finished consumer foods......................| 155.6
155.7
156.3
157.5
157.8
153.6
Crude......................................| 141.2
135.7
140.4
153.9
154.7
128.1
Processed..................................| 156.7
157.3
157.6
157.7
157.9
155.8
Finished consumer goods, excluding foods.....| 166.8
169.1
167.6
169.1
169.4
166.7
Nondurable goods less foods................| 178.9
182.7
180.7
182.7
182.9
178.8
Durable goods..............................| 137.3
136.2
136.1
136.3
137.0
137.1
Capital equipment..............................| 145.3
145.0
145.0
145.2
145.7
145.9
Manufacturing industries.....................| 146.6
146.9
147.1
147.3
147.5
148.0
Nonmanufacturing industries..................| 144.7
144.3
144.2
144.4
144.9
145.1
|
Intermediate materials, supplies, and components.| 157.3
162.0
159.8
160.0
161.9
161.4
Materials and components for manufacturing.....| 146.7
149.3
149.0
149.4
151.0
152.2
Materials for food manufacturing.............| 145.1
146.4
147.5
147.2
147.3
145.1
Materials for nondurable manufacturing.......| 166.7
173.0
168.6
168.6
171.8
174.5
Materials for durable manufacturing..........| 156.8
159.9
162.4
164.8
166.5
169.2
Components for manufacturing.................| 130.1
130.2
131.0
130.9
131.6
131.6
Materials and components for construction......| 176.9
179.3
181.1
182.1
184.0
184.6
Processed fuels and lubricants.................| 163.6
177.9
166.9
165.9
169.2
162.9
Manufacturing industries ....................| 162.5
176.3
167.4
165.0
170.7
163.4
Nonmanufacturing industries..................| 164.4
179.0
166.6
166.6
168.4
162.6
Containers.....................................| 166.1
166.9
168.5
169.7
171.2
171.8
Supplies.......................................| 152.5
153.6
153.9
154.0
155.3
155.7
Manufacturing industries.....................| 156.1
157.8
159.2
159.5
160.3
160.9
Nonmanufacturing industries..................| 150.4
151.3
151.2
151.4
152.7
153.0
Feeds......................................| 109.2
107.9
106.4
106.6
110.2
109.7
Other supplies.............................| 155.5
156.6
156.7
156.8
158.0
158.4
|
Crude materials for further processing...........| 200.3
211.7
208.0
203.2
202.2
183.6
Foodstuffs and feedstuffs......................| 120.7
120.6
121.6
124.7
121.0
117.4
Nonfood materials..............................| 256.7
276.9
269.6
258.7
259.9
230.0
Nonfood materials except fuel 2/.............| 192.2
190.2
183.7
190.8
193.0
191.4
Manufacturing 2/...........................| 177.9
176.1
169.9
176.6
178.6
177.1
Construction...............................| 198.5
198.0
200.9
200.1
200.6
201.6
Crude fuel 3/................................| 340.4
397.0
389.3
348.3
347.4
272.2
Manufacturing industries...................| 319.8
372.0
364.8
326.9
326.8
257.5
Nonmanufacturing industries................| 348.5
406.5
398.6
356.6
355.6
278.4
|
Special groupings
|
|
Finished goods, excluding foods..................| 158.9
160.3
159.4
160.4
160.8
159.1
Intermediate materials less foods and feeds......| 158.5
163.3
161.1
161.3
163.3
162.7
Intermediate foods and feeds.....................| 133.8
134.3
134.5
134.4
135.6
134.0
Crude materials less agricultural products 2/....| 264.3
285.3
277.8
266.4
267.5
236.6
|
Finished energy goods............................| 142.7
148.8
144.9
147.8
147.8
140.8
Finished goods less energy.......................| 156.4
156.1
156.5
156.9
157.4
156.6
Finished consumer goods less energy..............| 161.3
160.9
161.5
162.1
162.6
161.3
|
Finished goods less foods and energy.............| 157.1
156.6
156.9
157.1
157.7
158.1
Finished consumer goods less foods and energy....| 165.2
164.5
165.0
165.3
165.9
166.3
Consumer nondurable goods less foods and energy..| 188.2
187.9
189.0
189.3
189.8
190.6
|
Intermediate energy goods........................| 163.4
177.7
166.2
165.3
168.4
163.2
Intermediate materials less energy...............| 153.7
155.8
156.1
156.6
158.1
158.8
Intermediate materials less foods and energy.....| 154.9
157.1
157.5
158.0
159.6
160.4
|
Crude energy materials 2/........................| 278.2
308.6
295.0
279.0
280.8
235.2
Crude materials less energy......................| 144.4
143.4
146.0
148.6
145.8
145.0
Crude nonfood materials less energy 3/...........| 210.8
207.6
214.8
215.8
215.5
222.7
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________
1/
2/
3/

All seasonally adjusted indexes are subject to change up to 5 years after original publication due to
the recalculation of seasonal factors each January. The indexes for October 2005 have been
recalculated to incorporate late reports and corrections by respondents.
Includes crude petroleum.
Excludes crude petroleum.