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Wholesale Inventories Fall to 2-Year Low

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Bloomberg News

U.S. wholesale inventories fell in December to the lowest level in two years, a sign that factories may have to increase production to meet future demand.

The 0.6% decrease in stockpiles to $288.2 billion followed a November decline of 1.3% that was larger than estimated, the Commerce Department said. Inventories have been falling since June, and the December level was the lowest since January 2000.

Wholesaler sales fell 0.4% in December after being unchanged in November. The inventory-to-sales ratio, a measure of the time goods sit unsold in wholesaler warehouses and lots, nonetheless fell in December to 1.29 months, the lowest since February 2001, from 1.3 months in November.

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Compared with a year earlier, December inventories were down 5.3%, the largest decline in nine years of record keeping. Sales dropped 1% in all of 2001, also the biggest decline.

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