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In yet
another sign the recession is steepening U.S. Durable Orders
Collapse.
New
Orders
New orders for manufactured durable goods in October decreased $12.7 billion
or 6.2 percent to $193.0 billion, the U.S. Census Bureau announced today. This
was the largest percent decrease in new orders since October 2006 and
followed two consecutive monthly decreases including a 0.2 percent September
decrease.
Excluding transportation, new orders decreased 4.4 percent. Excluding
defense, new orders decreased 4.6 percent. Transportation equipment, down two
of the last three
months, had the largest decrease, $6.1 billion or 11.1 percent to $49.0
billion.
Shipments
Shipments of manufactured durable goods in October, down three consecutive
months, decreased $5.0 billion or 2.4 percent to $202.9 billion. This
followed a 0.2
percent September decrease. Transportation equipment, down two of the last
three
months, had the largest decrease, $2.4 billion or 4.6 percent to $48.3
billion.
Unfilled Orders
Unfilled orders for manufactured durable goods in October, down for the first
time in twenty-six months, decreased $4.6 billion or 0.6 percent to $823.6
billion.
This followed a 0.2 percent September increase. Primary metals, down three
consecutive months, had the largest decrease, $2.8 billion or 10.9 percent to
$23.3
billion. This was the largest percent decrease since the series was first
stated on a NAICS basis in 1992.
Inventories
Inventories of manufactured durable goods in October, up fifteen of the last
sixteen months, increased $1.4 billion or 0.4 percent to $341.1 billion. This
was at the
highest level since the series was first stated on a NAICS basis in 1992 and
followed a 0.2 percent September increase. Transportation equipment, up
twenty-one of the last twenty-two months, had the largest increase, $1.3
billion or 1.5 percent to $89.9 billion.
Inventories Up Orders
Down
With inventories rising and orders falling layoffs will have to increase.
Consumer Spending Falls 1%
Bloomberg
is reporting Consumer Spending
in U.S. Falls 1%, Most in 7 Years.
Spending by U.S. consumers dropped in October by the most since the 2001
contraction, signaling the economy is sinking into a deeper recession.
The 1 percent decline in purchases followed a 0.3 percent drop in September,
the Commerce Department said today in Washington. A separate report from
Commerce showed business investment also tumbled last month.
The biggest consumer spending slump in three decades is likely to persist as
home prices fall and job losses mount, threatening the holiday sales outlook
at retailers from Zale Corp. to Best Buy Co. Faltering demand has caused the
Federal Reserve, Treasury and President-elect Barack Obama to ratchet up
plans to ease the credit crisis.
"Everybody is cutting back at the same time," Christopher Low,
chief economist at FTN Financial in New York, said before the report. "This
takes us out of the generic recession category and puts us in the severe
recession category."
Economists forecast spending would fall 1 percent, after according to the
median of 72 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. Projections ranged from
declines of 0.4 percent to 2 percent.
Orders for durable goods fell 6.2 percent last month, twice as much as
forecast and the biggest drop in two years, Commerce reported separately.
Adjusted for inflation, spending fell 0.5 percent, a fifth consecutive
decline. The last time price-adjusted spending dropped as many months in a
row was in 1990-91.
Consumer spending dropped at a 3.7 percent annual pace in the third quarter,
more than the government had previously forecast and the biggest plunge since
1980, revised Commerce figures showed yesterday. The economy shrank 0.5 percent,
also faster than initially estimated.
Treasuries Rally
With the grim economic news continuing one might expect treasuries to rally
and that is what has happened.
Chart courtesy of Bloomberg.
Yields collapsed across the curve today with the yield on the long bond once
again nearing 3.50. The 10 year is on the verge of printing another 2 handle
and the 5 year a 1 handle. As long as the economy stays weak, treasury bears
are going to be very frustrated shorting the so called "bond
bubble".
Mish
GlobalEconomicAnalysis.blogspot.com
Mish's Global Economic
Trend Analysis
Thoughts on the great inflation/deflation/stagflation
debate as well as discussions on gold, silver, currencies, interest rates,
and policy decisions that affect the global markets.
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