New orders for U.S. manufactured capital goods  rose less than expected in June amid weak demand  for machinery and a range of other goods,  suggesting a prolonged downturn in business  spending. Business investment remains soft despite data  ranging from retail sales to housing suggesting  that the economy has regained speed after growth  almost stalled early in the year.    The Commerce Department said on Wednesday  non-defense capital goods orders excluding  aircraft, a closely watched proxy for business  spending plans, increased 0.2 percent last month  after decreasing 0.5 percent in May.     “It suggests that the disappointing  performance in business investment activity goes  beyond the slackening in capital goods demand in  the energy sector, and it underscores the  continued sluggishness in this segment of the U.S.  economy,” said Millan Mulraine, deputy chief  economist at TD Securities in New York.    Federal Reserve officials have flagged feeble  business spending as a source of concern and  sustained weakness could be one of the factors  that could encourage the U.S. central bank to keep  interest rates unchanged at the end a two-day  meeting later on Wednesday.    Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the  so-called core capital goods orders rising 0.3  percent last month.    Prices for U.S. government bonds rose on the  data, while the dollar was little changed against  a basket of currencies. U.S. stocks were trading  higher, boosted by strong financial results from  Apple (AAPL.O).      Overall orders for durable goods, items ranging  from                       toasters to aircraft that are meant to last  three years or more,    tumbled 4.0 percent last month, the biggest  drop since August 2014, after declining 2.8  percent in May.    SUBDUED BUSINESS INVESTMENT     Business spending has weakened since late 2015,  in part as lower oil prices squeezed profits in  the energy sector, forcing companies to slash  capital spending budgets. Uncertainty over global  demand and the upcoming U.S. presidential election  are also making companies cautious about spending,  economists say.                        Prospects for a pick-up in business spending  are less encouraging against the backdrop of  lackluster corporate profits.    “The bad news is not over. Everything  conspiring against the durables sector in 2015  will remain working against it for at least the  balance of 2016,” said Michael Montgomery, a  U.S. economist at IHS Global Insight in Lexington,  Massachusetts.    “The hope for 2017 is that the adjustment  processes start to wind down and produce less drag  and token recovery, but that feels like a vampire  drinking your blood slower.”    Shipments of core capital goods, which are used  to calculate equipment spending in the  government’s gross domestic product  measurement, fell 0.4 percent last month after  sliding 0.5 percent in May. That suggests business  spending probably fell again in the second  quarter.                       Should spending on equipment drop in the second  quarter, that would be the first time since the  2007-09 recession that outlays would have  contracted for three straight quarters.    According to a Reuters survey of economists,  the government will likely report on Friday that  GDP increased at a 2.6 percent annual rate in the  second quarter after rising at a 1.1 percent pace  in the January-March period.    In June, orders for electrical equipment,  appliances and components increased 0.8 percent.  But orders for machinery dipped 0.1 percent and  primary metals dropped 1.3 percent. Computers and  electronic products orders declined 2.2 percent,  the biggest fall since April 2015.     Orders for transportation equipment slumped  10.5 percent, the largest drop since August 2014,  as bookings for aircraft plunged 58.8 percent.  Orders for automobiles rose 2.6 percent.    Pointing to sustained weakness in business  spending, unfilled core capital goods orders fell  0.2 percent in June after slipping 0.4 percent in  May.     A separate report from the National Association  of Realtors showed contracts to purchase  previously owned homes rose 0.2 percent in June  after declining 3.7 percent in May.     (Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by  Andrea Ricci)
Wednesday, July 27, 2016
US durable goods orders data points to weak business spending – Reuters
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