The U.S.
Commerce Department reported on Thursday that the durable goods orders rose 2.0
percent m-o-m in June, following a revised 2.3 percent m-o-m drop in May
(originally a 1.3 percent m-o-m decline). That was the fastest rate of growth
since August 2018.
Economists had
forecast a 0.8 percent m-o-m increase.
According to
the report, orders for transportation equipment (+3.8 percent m-o-m) drove the increase.
Meanwhile, orders for durable goods excluding transportation rose 1.2 percent
m-o-m, following a revised 0.5 percent m-o-m advance in May (originally a 0.3
percent m-o-m advance) and beating market expectations of a 0.2 percent m-o-m
gain.
Orders for
non-defense capital goods excluding aircraft, a closely watched proxy for
business spending plans, surged 1.9 percent m-o-m in June, after increasing 0.3
percent m-o-m in May (revised from +0.4 percent m-o-m). Economists had forecast
core capital goods orders advancing 0.1 percent m-o-m in June.
Shipments of
these core capital goods went up 0.6 percent m-o-m in June after a revised 0.5
percent m-o-m gain in the prior month (originally a 0.7 percent m-o-m climb).