News

New orders for manufactured durable goods slid 6.3% M/M to $296.3B in April, less than the -8.1% consensus, and reversing from the 7.6% M/M increase in March, which was revised from 9.2%.
The US Commerce Department ... influenced by a volatile trade environment. The unexpected drop in durable goods orders adds another layer of complexity to the economic landscape, prompting ...
Non-defense capital goods orders excluding aircraft, a closely watched proxy for business spending plans, tumbled 1.3% last month. That was the largest drop since last October and followed an ...
Preliminary estimates of durable goods orders in the US showed a less sharp than expected dip in April. The decline was 6.3% versus a 7.5% jump a month earlier and an expected 7.6% drop.
durable goods orders rose slightly by 0.2%, indicating underlying demand in other sectors remains stable. More Information in our Economic Calendar. The decline was further exaggerated by a drop ...
Demand for durable goods sank in April, the month that President Trump announced his sweeping “Liberation Day” tariffs, dragged by lower aircraft orders. Total orders for goods made to last at ...
Excluding the steep drop by orders for transportation equipment, durable goods orders rose by 0.2 percent in May after dipping by 0.2 percent in April. Ex-transportation orders were expected to ...
(RTTNews) - With orders for transportation equipment pulling back sharply, the Commerce Department released a report on Tuesday showing a steep drop by new orders for U.S. manufactured durable ...
"More and more signs of the trade war showing up the “hard data” — take the Commerce Department’s latest report on orders for durable goods. It showed the biggest drop in six months ...
Orders for durable goods –items designed to last three years or more–fell 6.3% last month after a hefty revised 7.6% gain in March, the Commerce Department’s Census Bureau said on Tuesday.
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) The U.S. Census Bureau reported a 6.3% monthly drop in durable goods orders to $296.3 billion in April 2025, erasing gains from March's revised 7.6% surge. Transportation ...