Low aircraft sales see US durable goods sink in July
Analysts had been expecting July to see a steep downturn following June's spike in sales at aircraft giant Boeing. But the decrease was more than enough to reverse the gains recorded in June.
Durable goods orders have now been down for three of the last four months, possibly weighing on economic growth.
Total orders for durable goods fell 6.8 percent from June to $229.2 billion, the biggest one-month drop since August of 2014. Analyst had been expecting a fall of only six percent.
Year-to-date, however, orders were still five percent above the first seven months of 2016.
Civilian aircraft fell 70.7 percent for the month, after June's 129.3 percent gain.
Excluding the volatile transportation segment, however, orders rose 0.5 percent, the third monthly gain in a row.
The defense sector was July's strong point. Excluding defense goods, orders fell an even steeper 7.8 percent.
Orders for military aircraft rose 47.8 percent while defense capital goods gained 14.7 percent.
Pointing to a continuing recovery in the oil drilling sector, non-defense capital goods orders rose 0.4 percent.
Computers and electronic products also had their strongest sales in a year, adding 1.6 percent.
But sales of cars and car parts, which have had a weak first half of 2017, fell 1.2 percent, the largest monthly decrease since May of 2016.
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