US business spending on equipment ends Q1 on strong note

Updated 27 Apr, 2021

WASHINGTON: New orders for key US-made capital goods rose solidly in March and shipments surged, cementing expectations that economic growth accelerated in the first quarter as massive government aid and improving public health boosted demand.

The strength in business spending reported by the Commerce Department on Monday joined upbeat data on retail sales and the labour market in setting up the economy for what analysts expect will be its best performance this year in nearly four decades.

Economists saw little impact on investment from President Joe Biden’s push for a sweeping overhaul of the US tax system to make rich people and big companies pay more and help foot the bill for the White House’s ambitious economic agenda, including upgrading the nation’s crumbling infrastructure.

Details of the tax proposal could be released before Biden’s address to the US Congress on Wednesday. Economists said there was no evidence that former President Donald Trump’s deep corporate tax cuts boosted business investment.

Orders for non-defense capital goods excluding aircraft, a closely watched proxy for business spending plans, increased 0.9% last month. These so-called core capital goods orders fell 0.8% in February after bitterly cold temperatures gripped large parts of the country.

Though last month’s increase was below the 1.5% jump that had been anticipated by economists in a Reuters poll, core capital goods orders surged 10.4% year-on-year in March.

Reports this month showed retail sales raced to a record high in March while the economy created the most jobs in seven months. Factory activity measures are at multi-year highs, indicating continued strength in manufacturing, which accounts for 11.9% of the US economy.

In March, core capital goods orders were boosted by machinery, primary and fabricated metal products, as well as computers and electronic products. But orders for electrical equipment, appliances and components dropped 1.5%.

Shipments of core capital goods rebounded 1.3%, recouping February’s 1.1% drop. Core capital goods shipments are used to calculate equipment spending in the government’s gross domestic product measurement.

With households sitting on at least $2 trillion in excess savings, demand booming and inventories low, businesses are likely to continue investing in equipment to boost production, though raw material and input shortages could be an issue.

The government’s snapshot of first-quarter GDP on Thursday will likely show the economy grew at a 6.1% annualized rate, according to a Reuters survey of economists. That would be the a second fastest growth pace since the third quarter of 2003 and would follow a 4.3% rate of expansion in the final three months of 2020.

The economy grew at a record 33.4% pace in the third quarter of 2020 after contracting at a historic 31.4% rate in the April-June period. Growth is expected to top 7.0% this year, which would be the fastest since 1984. It would follow a 3.5% contraction last year, the worst performance in 74 years.

Orders for durable goods, items ranging from toasters to aircraft that are meant to last three years or more, rose 0.5% in March after falling 0.9% February. They were restrained by a 1.7% decline in orders for transportation equipment, which followed a 2.0% drop in February.

Orders for civilian aircraft tumbled 46.9%. That was despite Boeing reporting on its website that it had received 196 aircraft orders last month compared to 82 in February. Last month’s orders included 185 737 MAX jets. The US government late last year lifted a 20-month grounding of the aircraft that was put in place after crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia.

Orders for motor vehicles and parts shot up 5.5% in March after plunging 9.1% in February. Motor vehicle production has been hit by a global semiconductor chip shortage. Output of computers and electronic products also has been impacted.

Unfilled durable goods orders rose in March for the third straight month.

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