- Durable Goods Orders for December rose 5.2% versus estimates of a 1.6% increase and an upwardly revised .5% gain in November.
- Durables Ex Transports for December rose 2.6% versus estimates of a .1% increase and an upwardly revised .4% decline in November.
- Consumer Confidence for January fell to 87.9 versus estimates of 87.0 and an upwardly revised 90.6 in December.
BOTTOM LINE: Orders for US durable goods rose substantially more than forecast in December, indicating business investment remains healthy. Bloomberg reported. The 5.2% surge in demand for computers, aircraft and other items made to last several years was the largest since July 2007. Bookings for non-defense capital goods excluding aircraft, a gauge of future business investment, jumped 4.4%, the most since March of last year. Shipments of those items, used in determining GDP, rose 2%, the most since March of 2006. The rise in total orders was led by the largest gain in machinery bookings since December 2006, a jump in commercial aircraft and a 12% surge in communications gear. Shipments to international buyers set a ninth consecutive monthly record. To put today’s 5.2% jump in Durable Goods Orders in perspective, March 1993-February 1996, Sept. 1998-November 1999 and August 2002-February 2004 were periods in which Durable Goods Orders never rose above 5%. We were told by the many bears that the US economy was plunging into recession in 3Q when the credit turmoil began to intensify, but in actuality US GDP was rising at a very powerful 4.9% rate. The bears were even more certain that 4Q growth would be negative, however that now appears unlikely. Growth should come in around 1.5%. Now there doesn’t even seem to be a debate in many quarters, it is just assumed that we are now in a recession, which is defined as two consecutive quarters of GDP contraction. I continue to see little data to indicate we are now in a recession even as this is priced into stocks at current levels. I still expect US growth to average around 2% for the year.
Consumer confidence fell in January less than economists expected, Bloomberg reported. The Present Situation component rose to 115.3 from 112.9 the prior month. The Expectations component fell to 69.6 from 75.8 in December. The share of consumers who said jobs are plentiful rose to 23.9% versus 23.6% the prior month. The percentage of people that said jobs are hard to get fell to 20.1% from 22.7% in December. The percentage of consumers planning to buy an automobile rose to 6.7% from 6.3% the prior month. Those planning to buy an appliance rose to 30.5% from 28.1% prior. There remains a historically wide gap between consumers’ perceptions of their current financial situation and their views of the future. This is a direct result of the current “US negativity bubble,” in my opinion. Consumers have been told by so many high profile market participants, with negative political and/or financial agendas, for so many years that an imminent economic collapse is just around the corner that when we get a slowdown it is just assumed by most that the collapse in finally occurring, even though they don’t see it in their own finances. I suspect we have now seen the lows for the year in consumer sentiment gauges as economic pessimism begins to wane, home sales bounce unexpectedly, interest rates remain low, inflation decelerates, stocks rise and the job market remains healthy.
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