Dayton Daily News

Orders for big-ticket U.S. manufactur­ed goods jump

- ByMartin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON— Orders toU.S. factories for big-ticket manufactur­ed goods jumped 11.2% in July, the third consecutiv­e monthly gain.

And the jump last month was even larger than the 7.7% increase in June, the Commerce Department reported Wednesday.

The strong advance last month, however, was led by the volatile transporta­tion sector, which spiked 35.6%. Excluding transporta­tion, orders would have risen by a more modest 2.4%.

A closely watched category that serves as a proxy for business investment plans rose a solid 1.9% in July after a 4.3% rebound in June.

While the gains in orders for durable goods iswelcome, economists caution that could falter if coronaviru­s infections surge in the fall, forcing more factory shutdowns and a return to the near economic stall theU.S. went through this past spring.

“The details of the report indicate that businesses remain wary as the initial post-lockdown burst in activity is winding down and the public health situation isn’t under control,” said Lydia Boussour, senior U.S. economist at Oxford Economics.

The jump in transporta­tion was led by a 21.9% surge in orders for motor vehicles and parts which offset another big decline in demand for commercial aircraft as airlines continue canceling previous orders in the face of a plunge in air travel linked to the coronaviru­s.

The 11.2% rise in orders in July left total durable goods orders at a seasonally adjusted $230.7 billion.

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