Business investment remains soft despite data ranging from
retail sales to housing suggesting that the economy has regained
speed after growth almost stalled early in the year.
The Commerce Department said on Wednesday non-defense capital
goods orders excluding aircraft, a closely watched proxy for
business spending plans, increased 0.2 percent last month after
decreasing 0.5 percent in May.
Weak business spending could be one of the factors that could
encourage Federal Reserve officials to keep interest rates
unchanged at the end a two-day meeting later on Wednesday.
Economists polled by Reuters had forecast these so-called core
capital goods orders rising 0.3 percent last month.
The dollar fell against the euro after the report, while prices
for U.S. government bonds rose.
Overall orders for durable goods, items ranging from toasters to
aircraft that are meant to last three years or more, tumbled 4.0
percent last month, the biggest drop since August 2014, after
declining 2.8 percent in May.
Business spending has weakened since late 2015, in part as lower
oil prices squeezed profits in the energy sector, forcing
companies to slash capital spending budgets. Uncertainty over
global demand and the upcoming U.S. presidential election are
also making companies cautious about spending, economists say.
Prospects for a pick-up in business spending are dim against the
backdrop of lackluster corporate profits.
Shipments of core capital goods, which are used to calculate
equipment spending in the government's gross domestic product
measurement, fell 0.4 percent last month after sliding 0.5
percent in May. That suggests business spending probably fell
again in the second quarter.
Should spending on equipment drop in the second quarter, that
would be the first time since the 2007-09 recession that outlays
would have contracted for three straight quarters.
According to a Reuters survey of economists, the government will
likely report on Friday that GDP increased at a 2.6 percent
annual rate in the second quarter after rising at a 1.1 percent
pace in the January-March period.
In June, orders for electrical equipment, appliances and
components increased 0.8 percent. But orders for machinery fell
0.1 percent and primary metals dropped 1.3 percent. Computers
and electronic products orders declined 2.2 percent.
Orders for transportation equipment slumped 10.5 percent as
bookings for aircraft plunged 58.8 percent. Orders for
automobiles rose 2.6 percent.
Pointing to sustained weakness in business spending, unfilled
core capital goods orders fell 0.2 percent in June after
slipping 0.4 percent in May. Inventories of those goods rose 0.3
percent.
(Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
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