Aircraft Orders Lift Durables 2.2% - Los Angeles Times
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Aircraft Orders Lift Durables 2.2%

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From Reuters

A surge in demand for new commercial aircraft put some lift under the wings of manufacturing orders in December, but not enough to mask a loss of momentum in business, a government report Friday showed.

The Commerce Department said the value of new orders for durable goods--items intended to last three years or more--climbed a surprisingly strong 2.2% to $214.33 billion after a 1.8% rise in November.

All the end-of-year gain in overall orders came from aircraft. Excluding transportation items such as aircraft and automobiles, December orders dropped 1.4% after a scant 0.3% rise in November and a 3.2% plunge in October.

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The president of the National Manufacturers Assn., Jerry Jasinowski, said the report highlighted the risk to the economy from a developing industrial slowdown, and called for another aggressive interest-rate cut next week.

The Federal Reserve announced a surprise half-percentage-point reduction on Jan. 3, between its regularly scheduled policy meetings. It is expected to cut rates again, possibly by another half point, at the conclusion Wednesday of a scheduled two-day meeting of its Federal Open Market Committee.

The durable goods report offered numerous signs of sluggish manufacturing activity, already evident from a variety of other sources including announcements from U.S. auto makers that they are cutting assembly rates as vehicles pile up on dealers’ lots.

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The Commerce Department said shipments of finished goods, a gauge of current activity on the factory floor, declined for a third straight month in December, falling by 0.5% to $206.52 billion after a 1.15% decrease in November.

It was the first time since mid-1989--before the last recession, in 1990-91--that shipments have dropped for three months in a row, a Commerce Department official said.

New orders for industrial machinery, a component that includes computers, fell 5.3% in December after a 0.3% drop in November. Primary metals orders fell 3.5%, after a 2.6% decrease in November.

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Not all was bleak, though. Transportation orders soared 14.6% to $54.21 billion in December after jumping 7.3% in the prior month.

Electrical equipment orders were up 2.4% on top of a 6.75% jump in November.

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Durable Goods

New orders, in billions of dollars, seasonally adjusted:

December: $214.3 billion

Source: Commerce Department

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