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Economy |
Durable goods orders drop 3.6% in April - "Unexpectedly! |
2011-05-25 |
![]() New orders for manufactured durable goods in April decreased $7.1 billion or 3.6 percent to $189.9 billion, the U.S. Census Bureau announced today. This decrease, down two of the last three months, followed a 4.4 percent March increase. Excluding transportation, new orders decreased 1.5 percent. Excluding defense, new orders decreased 3.6 percent. Transportation equipment, also down two of the last three months, had the largest decrease, $4.9 billion or 9.5 percent to $46.7 billion. Even with this sharp drop in orders, inventories continued to expand, and have now reached record highs:
Bulging inventories mean that goods arenÂ’t moving. Until inventories begin to decline, orders will continue to fall as sellers run out of cash to buy more goods. We will soon start to see sharp discounting to get rid of inventories, which means narrower profits and less capital for future growth. The decrease in capital goods was even more dramatic, at 7.3% in the non-defense market. That points to a significant decrease in business investment, which would indicate that the private sector has turned bearish on the weak recovery from the Great Recession. If so, the tax break given to businesses as part of the deal made between the White House and Congress in December that allowed businesses to take a 100% write-off on FY2011 capital investment appears to have already run its course. ThatÂ’s bad news for the Obama administration, which had hoped to ride a rising economic wave to a second term in office for Barack Obama. |
Posted by:DarthVader |
#2 we all need to save for property taxes not reflective of the current markets & employment conditions pulse insane gasoline prices. All the while we watch banks take our neighbor's homes. |
Posted by: Water Modem 2011-05-25 16:46 |
#1 ![]() |
Posted by: gorb 2011-05-25 15:51 |