Fizzling capital goods orders are the unwelcome key to what at the
headline levels, at plus 0.2 percent overall and plus 0.5 percent
ex-transportation, look like a better-than-expected durable goods orders
report for August. But core capital goods orders (nondefense ex-air)
fell 0.2 percent which misses Econoday's consensus for no change and
include a major downward revision to July which had been at plus 0.4
percent but is now, like August, at no change. These two readings are
not favorable indications for third-quarter business investment, the
lynchpin to Federal Reserve rate-cut policy and their concerns that
slowing global growth will eat into US manufacturing.
Electrical
equipment as well as communications equipment, which are both major
pieces of the capital goods group, posted sharp monthly declines while
computers & electronic products also posted a decline. These offset
strong gains for primary metals, fabrications, and also machinery all of
which also feed into the capital goods reading. For GDP, orders don't
count but shipments do and here the news isn't much better as a 0.4
percent August rise is more than offset by a 0.6 percent July decline.
August
was also marked by a 17.1 percent swing lower in commercial aircraft
orders, a drop that followed large gains in July and June, and also a
sharp 0.8 percent monthly decline for motor vehicles & parts.
Orders
overall have been soft this year, down 0.4 percent compared to August
last year with core capital goods up only 1.1 percent. Commercial
aircraft, which is having a rough year with the 737 Max grounding, has
seen a 37.3 percent yearly decline. Doing better, however, have been
motor vehicles with a 5.9 percent year-on-year gain.
Other
readings in today's report include a marginal 0.1 percent uptick for
unfilled orders, a moderate 0.3 percent rise in inventories against only
a 0.1 percent increase in total shipments. Domestic manufacturing,
outward facing and subject to foreign demand, has been holding back the
general economy which otherwise, based on consumer spending, has
nevertheless been having a good year.
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