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FX.co ★ U.S. Durable Goods Orders Unchanged In December After Surging In November

U.S. Durable Goods Orders Unchanged In December After Surging In November

The US Commerce Department revealed that new orders for US-manufactured durable goods surprisingly remained unchanged in December, due to a decrease in transportation equipment orders despite growth in other sectors. Durable goods orders saw no significant change in December, following an upward revision of 5.5% in November.

Contrary to economists' predictions of a 1.1% rise, which was based on a reported 5.4% surge in orders in the previous month, the report shows no growth in durable goods orders. This unexpected lack of growth was mainly due to a 0.9% drop in orders for transportation equipment in December, following a surge of 15.3% in November.

However, if the decrease in transportation equipment orders is excluded, December's durable goods orders showed a 0.6% increase after a 0.5% rise in November, slightly outpacing the predicted growth of 0.2%. This growth was, in part, due to an increase in orders for electrical equipment, appliances and components, and primary metals, which surged by 1.8% and 1.4% respectively.

There was also a 0.9% rise in orders for fabricated metal products, as well as a small increase in orders for computers, electronic products, and machinery. The Commerce Department noted that orders for non-defense capital goods, excluding aircraft (a crucial measure of business spending), grew by 0.3% in December, following a 1.0% rise in November.

Meanwhile, shipments in the same category, which form the basis for equipment investment in the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), edged upwards by 0.1% in December, reversing a 0.2% decline in November.

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