ConsensusConsensus RangeActualPreviousRevised
New Orders - M/M-4.0%-5.7% to 0.5%-5.2%4.7%4.4%
Ex-Transportation - M/M0.2%-0.5% to 0.3%0.5%0.6%0.2%
Core Capital Goods - M/M0.0%0.0% to 0.1%0.1%0.2%-0.4%

Highlights

A 14.3 percent plunge in transportation equipment orders contributed to a 5.2 drop in new orders in July, below Econoday's consensus forecast of a 4.0 percent decrease. June estimate was revised down to 4.4 percent from 4.6 percent. New orders excluding transportation were up 0.5 percent, more than the 0.2 percent consensus, and following a 0.2 percent advance in June. New orders excluding defense were down 5.4 percent.

Core capital goods orders, excluding defense and aircraft, edged up 0.1 percent in July after contracting 0.4 percent in June, a slightly better performance than expected.

In addition to the drop in transportation orders, which more than erased June's 11.9 percent increase, computer and electronics edged down 0.1 percent. On the upside, primary metals moved up 0.1 percent, fabricated metals rose 0.7 percent, machinery increased 1.1 percent and electrical equipment, appliances, and components 1.0 percent.

Shipments and inventories were flat on the month, while unfilled orders rose 0.5 percent.

Market Consensus Before Announcement

Forecasters see durable goods orders falling 4.0 percent in August to reverse most of July's 4.6 percent aircraft-fed jump. Ex-transportation orders are seen up 0.2 percent with core capital goods orders unchanged.

Definition

Durable goods orders are new orders placed with domestic manufacturers for factory hard goods. The report also contains information on shipments, unfilled orders and inventories. The advance release provides early estimates and is revised about a week later by the factory orders report.

Description

Investors want to keep their finger on the pulse of the economy because it usually dictates how various types of investments will perform. Rising equity prices thrive on growing corporate profits - which in turn stem from healthy economic growth. Healthy economic growth is not necessarily a negative for the bond market, but bond investors are highly sensitive to inflationary pressures. When the economy is growing too quickly and cannot meet demand, it can pave the road for inflation. By tracking economic data such durable goods orders, investors will know what the economic backdrop is for these markets and their portfolios.

Orders for durable goods show how busy factories will be in the months to come, as manufacturers work to fill those orders. The data not only provide insight to demand for items such as refrigerators and cars, but also business investment such as industrial machinery, electrical machinery and computers. If companies commit to spending more on equipment and other capital, they are obviously experiencing sustainable growth in their business. Increased expenditures on investment goods set the stage for greater productive capacity in the country and reduce the prospects for inflation.

Durable goods orders tell investors what to expect from the manufacturing sector, a major component of the economy, and therefore a major influence on their investments.

Importance
Durable goods orders are a leading indicator of industrial production and capital spending.

Interpretation
The bond market will rally (fall) when durable goods orders are weak (strong). A moderately healthy report for new orders bodes well for corporate profits and the stock market, however. Durable goods orders are one of the most volatile economic indicators reported in the month and this series can be revised by significant amounts from one month to the next. More than any other indicator, it is imperative to follow either three-month moving averages of the monthly levels or year-over-year percent changes. These adjustments smooth out the monthly variability and provide a clearer picture of the trend in the manufacturing sector.

Whenever economic indicators are particularly volatile, it becomes customary to exclude the more variable components from the total. For instance, market players exclude defense orders and transportation orders from durable goods because these fluctuate more than the overall total. Incidentally, aircraft orders are the guilty culprit, which are included in both of these categories. Airplanes are ordered in quantity, not one at a time. Analysts exclude the categories containing aircraft orders because they obscure the underlying trend, not because the aircraft industry is unimportant.

Economists closely watch nondefense capital goods orders as a leading indicator of capital spending. Typically, traders follow the special series for nondefense capital goods excluding aircraft because it shows the underlying trend for equipment investment after discounting sharp swings from aircraft orders.

Durable goods orders are measured in nominal dollars. Economic performance depends on real, rather than nominal growth rates. One can compare the trend growth rate in durable goods orders with that of the PPI for finished goods to assess the growth rate in real orders.
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