Royal Oak Tribune

September factory orders up 1.9%, economists see risks ahead

- ByMartin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON » Orders to U.S. factories for big-ticket manufactur­ed goods rose a stronger-than-expected 1.9% in September with a key category that tracks business investment showing a solid gain as well.

The uptick in orders followed a smaller 0.4% increase in August and was the best gain since an 11.8% surge in July, the Commerce Department said Tuesday.

Orders for nondefense capital goods excluding aircraft, a key category seen as a proxy for business investment spending, rose 1% in September after bigger gains in July and August.

While the activity was significan­tly greater than the modest 0.5% advance many economists had been expecting, U.S. factories continue to

face significan­t headwinds.

“While the September data are positive, the risk to the manufactur­ing sector now comes from surging virus cases that could result in supply chain disruption­s, weigh on demand and slow thepaceof reboundgoi­ng forward,” said Rubeela Farooqi,

chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Eonomics.

Average deaths per day across thecountry­areup10% over thepast twoweeks, from 721 to nearly 794 as of Sunday, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. Newly confirmed infections perdayare rising in47 states, and deaths are up in 34.

The pace of durable goods orders has slowed after an initial burst in demand as the country re-opened after shutdowns in the spring to contain the virus. In addition to the new surge of infections now underway, analysts are worried that any boost from the $3 trillion in support Congress passed in the spring is fading. Congress so far has been unable to renew programs to boost unemployme­nt benefits and provide support to small businesses.

For September, orders in the volatile transporta­tion sector rose 4.1% with demand for motor vehicles and parts rising 1.5%. Even orders in the troubled commercial airline industry were up by $1.8 billion after having fallen $3.2 billion inAugust asmanyairl­ines struggling to cope with weak travel demand cut back on previous orders.

 ?? ERIN O. SMITH — CHATTANOOG­A TIMES FREE PRESS VIA AP FILE ?? Maurine Carter works on the wiring of a stove in LaFayette, Ga.
ERIN O. SMITH — CHATTANOOG­A TIMES FREE PRESS VIA AP FILE Maurine Carter works on the wiring of a stove in LaFayette, Ga.

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