The
Commerce Department said on Tuesday that factory orders rose
2.2% in March after edging up 0.1% in February. Economists
polled by Reuters had forecast factory orders would rise 1.1%.
Manufacturing, which accounts for 12% of the U.S. economy, faces
some headwinds in the near term from China's zero-tolerance
COVID-19 policy, which is causing disruptions to supply chains.
A survey on Monday showed the Institute for Supply Management's
national factory activity index fell for a second straight month
in April. The ISM said some manufacturers worried "about their
Asian partners' ability to deliver reliably in the summer
months."
The increase in factory orders in March was across the board.
Orders for motor vehicles and parts rebounded 3.0%, suggesting
an improvement in the global supply of semiconductors. The
Federal Reserve last month reported that motor vehicle
assemblies surged to a 14-month high in March.
There were increases in orders for machinery, primary metals and
electrical equipment, appliances and components. Orders for
computers and electronic products also rose as did those of
fabricated metal products.
Shipments of manufactured goods increased 2.3% after rising 1.1%
in February. Inventories at factories gained 1.3%. Unfilled
orders rose 0.4% after climbing 0.5% in the prior month.
The Commerce Department also reported that orders for
non-defense capital goods, excluding aircraft, which are seen as
a measure of business spending plans on equipment, rebounded
1.3% instead of 1.0% as previously reported last month.
Shipments of these so-called core capital goods, which are used
to calculate business equipment spending in the gross domestic
product report, rose 0.4% in March instead of the previously
reported 0.2%.
Strong business spending on equipment helped to shore up
domestic demand in the first quarter, even as GDP contracted at
a 1.4% annualized rate during that period.
(Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Paul Simao)
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