New orders for manufactured durable goods unexpectedly rose to $289.29B in February. This represents a 0.9% increase from the previous month and a 3.4% rise from one year ago. Excluding transportation ...
One reason for the decline is that companies stockpiled goods in March trying to get ahead of tariffs, and are now pulling back. But it also could signal tough times ahead for the U.S. economy. "More ...
If you want to see where the Trump administration’s trade policies may be affecting your household’s checkbook, consider the slice of consumer spending known as “durable goods.” These are the things ...
New orders for manufactured durable goods rose to $343.59B in May, its highest level in history. This represents a 16.4% increase from the previous month, the largest monthly jump since 2014, and a 19 ...
Despite myriad signs of a slowing economy and rising inflation, new orders for manufactured durable goods were actually up 0.8% in June for a total of $215.4 billion. The statistics, released by this ...
The numbers: Orders for long-lasting goods skyrocketed 16% in May to mark the biggest increase in 11 years, but the headline number was exaggerated by a flush of new Boeing contracts that masked ...
The numbers: Orders for long-lasting durable goods rose almost 1% in February as U.S. manufacturers rushed to procure supplies ahead of the Trump administration’s tariffs on foreign steel and aluminum ...
Transportation equipment, which had two consecutive monthly decreases, led the jump with $8.2 billion, or 11.5%, to $79.7 billion. Image courtesy Salvatore Vuono/freedigitalphotos.net. Shipments of ...