Alexander Bueso Sharecast News
24 Apr, 2024 14:43

US durable goods orders rise as expected in March, details weaker

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Boeing C 17 Globesmaster IIIU.S. Department of Defense Flickr (PD)

Boeing Co.

$179.79

10:59 03/05/24
0.53%
$0.94

Orders in the U.S. for goods made to last more than three years rose by slightly more than expected last month.

Dow Jones I.A.

38,675.68

04:30 15/10/20
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Yet the details of the report were noticeably weaker.

According to the U.S. Department of Commerce, in seasonally adjusted terms durable goods orders grew at a month-on-month pace of 2.6% in March (consensus: 2.5%).

However, the prior month's gains was revised lower, from a preliminary print of 1.4% to 0.7%.

Furthermore, the lion's shares of March's increased was the result of a 31% jump in orders for Boeing aircraft.

Indeed, excluding the entire transportation sector, then total orders were up by only 0.2% over the month in March and by 0.1% in February.

Orders for capital goods excluding civilian aircraft and defence, which are considered a good gauge of underlying trends in investment, were ahead by just 0.2%.

Commenting on the latest figures, Bernard Yaros, Lead U.S. economist at Oxford Economics, told clients: "If our real-time tracker of real equipment spending is correct, it would mark the sharpest decline since Q3 2021 and the third quarterly drop in a row.

"We still look for real equipment spending to record subdued growth this year and accelerate meaningfully in 2025."

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