
Bloomberg (26/9) - Orders for goods
such as computers and machinery rose less than forecast in August,
showing a pickup in U.S. business spending will take time to develop.
Bookings
for non-military capital equipment excluding aircraft increased 1.5
percent after a 3.3 percent drop in July, the Commerce Department
reported today in Washington.
The median forecast of economists
surveyed by Bloomberg projected a 2 percent gain. Another report showed
sales of new houses over the past two months were the weakest of the
year.
Factory production is stabilizing as Americans replace
older-model cars and companies invest in new technology. An escalating
budget battle in Washington and higher interest rates mean companies
will need to see bigger gains in sales to justify updating equipment,
which will probably limit any rebound in manufacturing.
Orders
are “rising, but they’re rising modestly,” said Kevin Logan, chief U.S.
economist for HSBC Securities USA Inc. in New York, the second-best
forecaster for capital goods orders over the past two years, according
to data compiled by Bloomberg. “Until businesses are more confident
about the growth in underlying demand, they’ll be cautious as far as
adding capacity.”
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-09-25/demand-for-u-s-capital-goods-climbs-as-investment-recovers.html
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