MnetTV          Digital Library

Search Manufacturing.net Search Manufacturing.net
Today in Manufacturing.Net

Resources
Association Links
Bookstore
Digital Library
Events Calendar
Job Search
What’s New
White Papers

Browse White Papers


News
Featured Articles
Financial News
Global Manufacturing
Government News
Mergers & Acquisitions
News Archive
People in the News

Job Search


Market Sectors
Aerospace
Automotive/Transportation
Chemical/Petroleum
Food/Beverage
Medical
Metals
Pharmaceuticals/Biotech
Plastics/Rubber
Other Manufacturing

Industry Focus
Design & Development
Electrical & Electronics
Energy
Environmental
Facilities & Operations
Labor Relations
Manufacturing Technology
Materials
Quality
Safety
Supply Chain

Amazon

About Us
Editorial Contacts
Advertise with Us

Our Partner Sites
Chem.Info
ECN
Food Manufacturing
IMPO (Industrial Maintenance & Plant Operation)
Medical Design Technology
Pharmaceutical Processing
Product Design & Development
R & D Magazine
Wireless Design & Development
Wireless Week



 


Mnet house ad 120x240



Factory Orders Rebound In September
By Martin Crutsinger, AP Economics Writer
Manufacturing.Net - November 03, 2009

Printer Friendly     E-mail to a Colleague


WASHINGTON (AP) -- Orders to U.S. factories rebounded in September, helped by strength in autos, heavy machinery and military aircraft.

The fifth increase in six months bolstered hopes that a revival in manufacturing will help support an overall economic recovery. The worry is that if consumer spending falters in coming months, orders will slump again.

The Commerce Department said Tuesday that orders rose 0.9 percent in September, slightly better than the 0.8 percent gain economists had expected. Demand increased for both durable goods, and nondurable goods such as chemicals and energy products.

New orders for durable goods, items expected to last at least three years, advanced 1.4 percent, better than the 1 percent estimate the government made last week.

Demand for heavy machinery jumped 7.9 percent, the biggest gain in 18 months. There also was strong demand for military aircraft, which helped offset a second straight drop in orders for commercial airplanes.

Orders for nondurable goods rose 0.6 percent following a 0.9 percent increase in August, led by petroleum, chemicals and food products.

Joshua Shapiro, chief U.S. economist at MFR Inc. in New York, noted that orders for non-defense capital goods excluding aircraft -- a good proxy for business investment plans -- posted a solid 1.8 percent rise in September after two straight declines.

"Much of this is related to a need to stabilize inventories after savage liquidation in the first half of the year," Shapiro wrote in a note to clients. "Today's reported gain for September puts things back on track after the disappointing results recorded in the preceding two months."

The better-than-expected reading for factory orders followed a report Monday from the Institute for Supply Management that its gauge of manufacturing activity grew in October at the fastest pace in more than three years.

The ISM index rose to 55.7 in October, the third straight reading above 50, which signals growth in the sector. Businesses' replenishing stockpiles, higher demand for American exports and support from the government's $787 billion stimulus program led the advance.

But with jobs scarce, lending tight and consumers wary of spending, it's unclear whether the gains can be sustained as government stimulus programs wind down.

Factory orders were valued at a seasonally adjusted $356.1 billion in September. But through the first nine months of the year, orders are 21.7 percent below the pace of 2008, underscoring the severity of the recession.

The government reported last week that the overall economy, as measured by the gross domestic product, grew at an annual rate of 3.5 percent in the July-September quarter, the first growth after a record four straight declines. Economists said that was the strongest signal to date that the recession, which began in December 2007, was ending.

Still, unemployment likely will keep rising amid a sluggish recovery. The jobless rate hit a 26-year high of 9.8 percent in September and is expected to rise to 9.9 percent when the October report is released Friday. Many analysts believe the jobless rate will top 10 percent by the end of this year and will not peak until next summer.

The ISM, a trade group of purchasing executives, said the October index showed manufacturing employment grew for the first time in 15 months, rising to 53.1 last month from 46.2. But the measure tracking new orders, a signal of future production, slipped in September.

Farm and construction equipment makers Deere & Co. and Caterpillar Inc. said last week they each were adding back a few hundred jobs, and Kemet Corp., which makes parts for electric drive vehicles and alternative energy markets, is adding 113 jobs in South Carolina because of a $15.1 million grant from the Department of Energy that is enabling it to transfer some manufacturing from Europe to the U.S.

But layoffs continue. Sun Microsystems Inc. said in October it plans to eliminate up to 3,000 jobs before it's acquired by Oracle Corp.

In October, the ISM said 13 of the 18 manufacturing industries surveyed expanded, led by petroleum and coal production, apparel and furniture. Three industries shrank.


Printer Friendly     E-mail to a Colleague



Talkback!
Manufacturing.net is pleased to provide you an opportunity to share your opinions on any of the news stories or articles on our site. We reserve the right to edit/remove comments.
Viewing 3 User Comments
Add a Comment
Factory orders up?  11/3/2009 1:27:00 PM
It's confusing how factory orders can go up yet the economy continues to spiral down. I would like to believe that this increase factory spending will result likewise in increased hiring but I'm not optimistic. My only guess is that company management justifies additional factory spending by using the money saved when they lay off valuable personnel. Increased factory spending conflicts with other stories I've read stating that some 40,000 factories in the United States have been closed since 1990. Unfortunately there are many companies that simply choose to shutter their factories and contract all manufacturing out to the cheap labor of communist China. I know this happened last year with Intermec. They canned several hundred good manufacturing personnel to increase their profits. You wouldn't guess that by looking at the prices of their bar code equipment though. There are other companies in the region that are also engaged in the active process of shipping their manufacturing operations off shore. It won't be long before they too lay off their factory personnel and close their manufacturing facilities.
Factory Orders Up?  11/3/2009 4:28:00 PM
I have been a Manufacturing Purchasing Manager for the last 38 years and an ISM Member for the last 20 years. The ISM index is speculative at best. This information gathered by the ISM is not scientific or substantiated with any real hard facts.It's just best guess estimates from Purchasing Managers in the Industry. I base this on my association with the ISM and other Purchasing managers I network with. "Purely Speculative"
The First Sentence...  11/4/2009 9:48:00 AM
explains it all. AUTOS are mostly government or foreign owned now. HEAVY MACHINERY used for govt. or foreign auto companies. MILITARY AIRCRAFT (self explanatory). Everything else is probably down.


Add a Comment...

E-Mail:
The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Subject:
Comment:

 

     



   





Flatbed trucking, flatbed shipping, flatbed carriers



Aerospace

Northrop Grumman Gains $303M Air Force Contract

Boeing Breaks Ground On S.C. 787 Plant

Airbus Tests All 4 Military Airlifter Engines


Plastics/Rubber

Goodyear Raises Tire Prices To Offset Costs

Chemical BPA Linked To Sex Problems In Workers

EU Fines Plastics Cartel For Price Fixing

Other Manufacturing

Procter & Gamble Still Looking For Acquisitions

New Era Cap Co. Consolidating Plants

Champion: No Layoffs At Nebraska Plant
News Video