Washington - An unexpected decline in US orders for business equipment in May indicates cooling capital-goods investment may weigh on second-quarter economic growth, Commerce Department data showed on Monday.
Highlights of durable goods (May)
Orders for non-military capital goods excluding aircraft fell 0.2% (est. 0.4% gain) after 0.2% increase in prior month. Shipments of those goods, which are used to calculate gross domestic product, fell 0.2% after 0.1% gain. Bookings for all durable goods fell 1.1% (est. 0.6% drop) following 0.9% decline; excluding transportation-equipment demand, which is volatile, orders rose 0.1% (est. 0.4% gain)
Key takeaways
The broad slowdown in equipment orders and shipments raises the risk that business investment will provide less of a boost than anticipated to the economic rebound this quarter, leaving the heavy lifting to household spending.
The outlook for capital-goods production is clouded by cooling automobile sales, while overseas markets - though improving - are yet to show the kind of demand acceleration that would spur exports of US-made goods.
Other details
Orders for non-defense capital goods excluding aircraft dropped most since December; durable-goods orders fell most since November Orders for motor vehicles and parts rose 1.2%; compares with industry data showing sales of cars and light trucks slowed in May for the fourth time in the past five months.
Orders for fabricated metal products fell 0.2% after a 1% decline; machinery orders rose 0.6%.
Computer and electronic-products orders decreased 0.2%. Bookings for civilian aircraft and parts dropped 11.7%; defense capital-goods orders fell 8.2%. Durable-goods inventories rose 0.2%; unfilled orders for non-defense capital goods excluding aircraft advanced 0.2%.
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