Excluding transportation, and orders tied to the biennial Dubai airshow, new orders rose a less exciting 0.2 percent. But indications from core capital goods are very strong with new orders surging 1.3 percent on top of a 0.5 percent orders gain in September. Turning to capital goods industries, new orders for machinery jumped 1.2 percent with computer orders up 5.9 percent.
A negative in the report is a surprising 2.0 percent decline for vehicle orders, a disappointment that may very well be reversed in coming months based on the sustained and unusual strength of vehicle sales.
Looking at other readings, total shipments fell 0.5 percent in October which is not a good start to the fourth quarter with core capital goods shipments also down 0.5 percent. But future shipments are certain to benefit from October's orders gain. Inventories, which are widely seen as too high, did dip 0.1 percent but relative to shipments could do no more than hold steady at a ratio of 1.35. Unfilled orders are positive, ending two months of decline with a 0.3 percent gain.
Given that the factory sector has been in decline all year, the order data in this report are encouraging and should help offset concern from this week's sub-50 reading in the ISM manufacturing report.
Recent History Of This Indicator:
On back of a 3.0 percent jump in durable goods orders, factory orders for October are expected to jump 1.4 percent in a gain that would end two months of frustrating contraction. Details in the durable goods report showed particular strength for core capital goods orders which in turn points to improvement in business sentiment. October's factory orders report will include initial data on nondurable goods where month-to-month price changes for commodities and fuel can make for wide swings.
On back of a 3.0 percent jump in durable goods orders, factory orders for October are expected to jump 1.4 percent in a gain that would end two months of frustrating contraction. Details in the durable goods report showed particular strength for core capital goods orders which in turn points to improvement in business sentiment. October's factory orders report will include initial data on nondurable goods where month-to-month price changes for commodities and fuel can make for wide swings.
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