South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Orders for durable goods in US rise 0.4% in August

- BY MARTIN CRUTSINGER

WASHINGTON — Orders to U.S. factories for big-ticket manufactur­ed goods increased just 0.4% in August following a much larger gain in the previous month.

It was the fourth consecutiv­e monthly increase, but the most recent uptick was far weaker than the 11.7% surge in July, the Commerce Department reported Friday.

Economists had expected production to ease somewhat after manufactur­ers rebounded strongly in previous months from COVID-19 related shutdowns, but the growth in August was less than half what economists had projected.

A key category that tracks business investment plans rose 1.8% in August, compared with gains of 2.5% in July and 4.3% in June.

Economists appear divided over how to interpret the data. Some saw the string of positive numbers as a hopeful sign of a strong bounce back. Others, however, believe the modest advance overall signals that manufactur­ing appears paced for a slow recovery now that an initial boost from reopenings and government aid has faded.

“We’re now in Phase 2 of this recovery, in which the economy will face persistent headwinds of the COVID-19 crisis without the support of meaningful fiscal stimulus and as a vaccine still remains absent,” said Oren Klachkin, lead U.S. economist at Oxford Economics.

The report showed that the volatile transporta­tion sector rose a modest 0.5% as orders for motor vehicles and parts fell 4%, after a 21.7% surge in July as auto plants reopened.

Excluding transporta­tion, orders would have risen 0.4%.

The changes left total orders at a seasonally adjusted $232.8 billion in August.

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