Canadian manufacturing sales fell in June following three consecutive months of gains, with declines led by the petroleum and coal industry.

Manufacturing sales slipped 1.8% overall to $53.9 billion in June, Statistics Canada said Thursday in a monthly report.

Sales also fell 1.0% in constant dollars, indicating a lower volume of manufactured goods was sold in June.

“After several strong months, the Canadian manufacturing sector hit a speedbump in June with sizable declines in both value and volume terms,” TD Bank senior economist Michael Dolega wrote in a report.

The June report did not alter TD’s view for the second quarter but suggested a “marked deceleration of growth” for the third quarter is in the cards, Dolega added.

The weaker-than-expected manufacturing report follows a series of strong economic data to start the year and the Bank of Canada’s decision last month to raise its key interest rate target for the first time since 2010.

Manufacturing sales fell in 15 of 21 industries, representing 72.1% of the manufacturing sector in Canada in June.

The petroleum and coal product industry fell 7.1% to $4.6 billion in June, following a 3.0% drop in May due to lower prices and lower volumes.

The transportation equipment industry slipped 2.3% to $11.3 billion in June, while the chemical industry dropped 4.5% to $4.3 billion.

Statistics Canada said manufacturing sales fell in eight provinces in June, led by Ontario and Quebec.

Ontario saw a drop of 1.7% to $25.9 billion, the largest decrease in the province since May 2016, while Quebec fell 3.3% to $12.3 billion.

Sales in Manitoba rose 6.0% to $1.6 billion and British Columbia gained 0.9% to $4.2 billion.