Rise in U.S. business equipment spending allays recession fears
						
		 
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		 [August 25, 2022]  By 
		Lucia Mutikani 
		 
		WASHINGTON (Reuters) - New orders for 
		U.S.-manufactured capital goods increased in July, but the pace slowed 
		from the prior month, suggesting a moderate rebound in business spending 
		this quarter. 
		 
		The report from the Commerce Department on Wednesday also showed solid 
		gains in shipments of these goods. While part of the rise was because 
		businesses are spending more due to higher prices, the data was another 
		sign that the economy continues to grow at a slow pace and was not in 
		recession. 
		 
		"The absence of a sustained decline in orders suggests that businesses 
		are still investing despite tighter financial market conditions, a drop 
		in sentiment and worries about a recession," said Ryan Sweet, a senior 
		economist at Moody's Analytics in West Chester, Pennsylvania. 
		 
		Orders for non-defense capital goods excluding aircraft, a closely 
		watched proxy for business spending plans, rose 0.4% last month. Data 
		for June was revised higher to show these so-called core capital goods 
		orders advancing 0.9% instead of 0.7% as previously reported. Economists 
		polled by Reuters had forecast core capital goods orders would increase 
		0.3%. 
		  
						
		
		  
						
		 
		The report added to data on retail sales, industrial production and the 
		labor market in underscoring the economy's resilience. Orders are 
		slowing as the Federal Reserve's aggressive monetary policy campaign to 
		fight inflation dampens demand. Fed Chair Jerome Powell's address on 
		Friday at the annual Jackson Hole global central banking conference in 
		Wyoming could shed more light on whether the U.S. central bank can 
		engineer an economic slowdown without triggering a recession. 
		 
		Manufacturing, which accounts for 11.9% of the economy, remains 
		supported by still-low inventories of long-lasting manufactured goods 
		like motor vehicles.  
		 
		There were increases in orders of machinery, fabricated metal products 
		as well as computers and electronic products in July. But orders for 
		electrical equipment, appliances and components fell as did those for 
		primary metals. 
		 
		Stocks on Wall Street were trading higher. The dollar was largely 
		unchanged against a basket of currencies. U.S. Treasury prices fell. 
		 
		MUDDLED PICTURE 
		 
		Core capital goods shipments climbed 0.7% after advancing 0.8% in June. 
		Core capital goods shipments are used to calculate equipment spending in 
		the gross domestic product measurement. 
		 
		Higher prices are making it harder to get a clean read of the equipment 
		spending data, which is not adjusted for inflation. There is also 
		uncertainty over which price index the government will use to adjust the 
		data for inflation. 
		 
		The producer price index for private capital equipment increased 0.5% in 
		July which would imply that the inflation-adjusted core capital goods 
		orders were negative last month. But shipments are running ahead of 
		inflation, putting equipment spending on a moderate growth path early in 
		the third quarter.  
		 
		
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			Boeing employees walk near a partially 
			finished Boeing 777X airplane at the company's plant in Everett, 
			Washington, U.S. January 25, 2020. REUTERS/Terray Sylvester/File 
			Photo 
            
			
			  
"Lower commodity prices suggest the potential for a lower equipment investment 
price index in the third quarter and consequently more of the nominal strength 
to work its way through to measured real growth," said Andrew Hollenhorst, chief 
U.S. economist at Citigroup in New York. 
 
Business spending on equipment declined at a 2.7% annualized rate in the second 
quarter, the most in two years. That, together with a slower pace of inventory 
accumulation relative to the prior two quarters, helped to weigh down GDP. The 
economy contracted 1.3% in the first half of the year. 
 
Orders for durable goods, items ranging from toasters to aircraft that are meant 
to last three years or more, were unchanged in July after increasing 2.2% in 
June.  
 
They were restrained by a 0.7% decline in orders for transportation equipment. 
Orders for civilian aircraft soared 14.5%. They were, however, offset by a 49.8% 
plunge in orders for defense aircraft. Boeing reported on its website that it 
had received 130 aircraft orders compared to only 50 in June. 
 
Orders for motor vehicles and parts rose 0.2% last month. Motor vehicle 
production remains constrained by a global semiconductor chip shortage. Durable 
goods shipments rose 0.4% after increasing 0.3% in June. Unfilled durable goods 
orders advanced 0.7%, while inventories gained 0.2%. 
 
"Measuring inventories is particularly difficult in inflationary times, but the 
inventory to sales ratio as reported has not increased over the last year and 
supports the view that inventories remain tight," said Conrad DeQuadros, senior 
economic advisor at Brean Capital in New York.  
 
While manufacturing is hanging on, the stiffest run of interest rate increases 
since the 1980s is having a significant impact on the housing market. In a 
separate report on Wednesday, the National Association of Realtors reported that 
its Pending Home Sales Index, based on signed contracts, dropped 1.0% to 89.8 
last month, the lowest level since April 2020. Contracts have declined in eight 
of the last nine months. 
  
  
 
But, with house prices still elevated as affordable homes remain scarce, a 
housing market collapse is unlikely. 
 
"We are not at risk of a housing crash, conditions are nothing like what the 
market experienced during the last housing crisis," said Nicole Bachaud, a 
senior economist at Zillow in Seattle. "We should not confuse the inability to 
buy a home with a lack of desire to buy." 
 
(Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Nick Zieminski and Paul Simao) 
				 
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