Factory orders for June rose a sharp 0.7 percent but miss Econoday's
consensus by 2 tenths in a report that does include some slowing. Orders
for commercial aircraft were a plus in the month as were orders for
vehicles excluding which, as well as all other transportation equipment,
orders in June rose 0.4 percent and are unchanged from last week's
advance estimate.
What are changed are orders for core capital
goods (nondefense ex-aircraft) which are revised to only a 0.2 percent
gain vs a 0.6 percent rise in last week's advance data. Shipments for
this reading are revised 3 tenths lower to a 0.7 percent gain in a
downgrade that will weigh slightly on forecasts for the second estimate
of second-quarter GDP.
Orders for steel and aluminum fell back in
June though unfilled orders are up and related inventories continue to
rise sharply. Total orders for durable goods rose 0.8 percent, revised 2
tenths lower from the advance report, with orders for non-durable
goods, the fresh information in today's report, up 0.5 percent on
strength in chemicals vs May's 1.1 percent gain which was fed by
strength in petroleum and coal.
Other data include a useful build
in total unfilled orders which extended recent gains with a 0.4 percent
rise. Total shipments were very strong, up 1.0 percent despite wide
reports in the month of trucking snags. Inventories are low in the
factory sector, up only 0.1 percent in June to drive down the
inventory-to-shipments ratio to 1.33 from 1.35.
Today's strong
headline aside, June wasn't that great of a month for the factory sector
which perhaps was held down to a degree by tariff-related disruptions.
Year-on-year growth in orders is very positive, at 6.1 percent, but down
from 9.2 and 7.9 percent in the two prior months. Nevertheless,
indications including strong readings in regional and private
manufacturing reports point to second-half acceleration for the sector
and second-half leadership for the 2018 economy.
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