U.S. factory orders fell by 3.3 percent in July, reversing 3.2 percent June gains fueled by a burst of orders for Boeing aircraft, the Commerce Department reported Tuesday. The July slump was the biggest monthly drop in nearly three years. It was roughly in line with economists' expectations of a 3.4 percent drop. Orders for non-defense capital goods, not counting aircraft, rose by 1 percent. That surge in shipments of core capital goods, used to calculate business spending in the gross domestic product report, was good news. "The recovery in business equipment investment that began late last year appears to have continued into the second half of 2017," said John Ryding, chief economist at RDQ Economics in New York. Source: MarketWatch, Reuters |
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