Manufacturing AUTOMATION

Orders for US big ticket factory goods drop 17.2% in April

May 28, 2020
By Paul Wiseman, The Associated Press

WASHINGTON – U.S. orders for big-ticket factory goods plunged for the second straight month in April as the coronavirus pandemic hammered the economy.

The Commerce Department said Thursday that orders for durable goods dropped 17.2 per cent last month after falling 16.6 per cent in March. Excluding orders for transportation equipment, which can be volatile from month to month, durable goods orders fell 7.4 per cent.

New orders for cars, trucks and auto parts shrank 52.8 per cent.

A category that tracks business investment – orders for non-defence capital goods excluding aircraft – decreased 5.8 per cent after falling 1.1 per cent in March.

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The lockdowns, travel restrictions and social distancing measures meant to contain COVID-19 have brought economic activity to a near standstill across the United States.

Still, last month’s decline in durable goods orders was slightly less than economists had expected.

Separately Thursday, the Commerce Department reported that the economy shrank at a five per cent annual pace in the January-March period, worse than initially reported.

Greogry Daco, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics, said the durable goods report is another sign that the economy will struggle to bounce back.

“Overall, depressed global and domestic demand, broken supply chains, low oil prices, tighter financial conditions, elevated uncertainty and lingering virus fear will prevent a V-shaped recovery” in the second half, Daco wrote in a research note.

“Still, we anticipate a partial resumption of activity going into (the third quarter) as factories slowly resume operations.”

News from © The Canadian Press Enterprises 2020


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