Implications: After large swings in June and July, durable goods orders were unchanged in August as rising defense and motor vehicle orders offset declines in most other categories. While orders have remained subdued in the past year - new orders are down 1.3% in the past twelve months – we think the decline is largely the result of efficiency improvements and falling prices for technology (the device you are reading this on now costs a fraction of what equivalent technology would have cost just years ago), not signs of a wider breakdown in economic activity. The largest gains in August came from the volatile transportation sector, where a rise in orders for defense aircraft and autos more than offset declining commercial aircraft orders. Exclude the transportation sector, and orders declined 0.4% in August. But taking a look at the trend in orders - up 1.6% at an annual rate in the past three months compared to a 0.9% annual rate in the past six months and a decline of 1.1% from a year ago - and it's clear that orders outside the transportation sector are slowly rising. This may be in part a sign of improvement in the energy sector (next week's factory orders report will have more details), which had been pulling down machinery investment since oil prices started declining in mid-2014. As a whole, orders have been relatively flat in 2016, in contrast to the continued gains in employment, rising wages, a pick-up in inflation, and steady expansion in the service sector. What could be causing the divergence in readings? First, companies are becoming more efficient, making better use out of existing equipment. Second, companies may be cautious with spending due to the slowdown in global growth and uncertainty regarding international operations. If that's the case, expect orders to pick up in the months ahead. Shipments of "core" capital goods - non-defense, excluding aircraft – declined 0.4% in August, and if unchanged in September, will be a drag on Q3 GDP growth. But core capital goods orders have risen in each of the last three months, and are up at the fastest three-month pace in nearly two years. In other words, expect shipments to follow suit higher in the months ahead. On the manufacturing front, the Richmond Fed index, a measure of mid-Atlantic manufacturing sentiment rose to -8 in September from -11 in August. On the housing front, the national Case-Shiller price index rose 0.4% in July and is up 5.1% from a year ago. Price gains in the past year have been led by Portland, Seattle, Denver, and Dallas.
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Posted on Wednesday, September 28, 2016 @ 11:24 AM
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