The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Orders for factory goods tumbled 1.1% last month

- By Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON >> Orders to U.S. factories for bigticket manufactur­ed goods slumped 1.1% in February with demand in a key sector that tracks business investment also dropping.

Orders had been rising for nine consecutiv­e months, including a sizable 3.5% jump in January, according to the Commerce Department.

The size of the drop surprised economists, though it is likely that there was significan­t disruption from severe winter storms that hit much of the country last month, on top of ongoing supplychai­n problems.

The category that covers business investment dropped 0.8% in February following solid gains of 0.6% in January and 1.5% in December.

The volatile transporta­tion sector fell 1.6% with demand for commercial aircraft, a sector plagued by the huge drop in air travel during the pandemic, shooting up 103%. Contributi­ng was beleaguere­d manufactur­er Boeing, which for the first time since December 2019 booked positive net orders.

But orders for autos and auto parts slumped 8.7% with numerous plants shutdown due to a global shortage of semiconduc­tors, a critical component used in cars and trucks.

The 0.8% decline in demand for nondefense capital goods excluding aircraft, the category that serves as a proxy for business investment plans, was blamed on weather disruption­s. Economists predicted a rebound in coming moths as businesses boost their investment spending in response to falling virus cases and President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion support package.

“With the weather returning to seasonal norms and the next fiscal stimulus payments already being distribute­d, orders likely will rebound in March,” said Andrew Hunter, senior U.S. economist at Capital Economics. “With corporate borrowing costs still close to historic lows ... we expect investment to continue expanding at a robust pace over the coming months.”

Hunter expects an annualized gain in business equipment investment of 10% to 15% in the first quarter.

The report Wednesday showed that excluding transporta­tion, orders would still have fallen by 0.9% in February. Demand for primary metals such as steel slipped 0.5% while orders for machinery fell 0.6%. Demand for computers and related products declined 1.9%.

 ?? STEVEN SENNE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Stoves on display at a Home Depot in Boston. The Commerce Department reported Wednesday that orders for durable goods declined last month for the first time after nine consecutiv­e monthly gains including a sizable 3.5% rise in January.
STEVEN SENNE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Stoves on display at a Home Depot in Boston. The Commerce Department reported Wednesday that orders for durable goods declined last month for the first time after nine consecutiv­e monthly gains including a sizable 3.5% rise in January.

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