U.S. Demand Cools At The Edges As Core Orders Hold
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Official data from the U.S. Census Bureau, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and the Mortgage Bankers Association show softer demand and steadier core orders.
The Census Bureau said July factory orders fell 1.3% after June's 4.8% decline. Shipments rose 0.9%, and inventories increased 0.3%.
Factory new orders excluding transportation rose 0.6% in July. That steadiness excludes volatile aircraft and large vehicles.
The advance durable goods report adds key detail. Durable orders excluding transportation rose 1.1%, while durable orders excluding defense fell 2.5%. Transportation equipment weakness drove the headline drop.
Labor demand eased. BLS reported 7.181 million job openings in July, with 5.308 million hires and 5.289 million separations. The figures show slower recruitment with stable separations.
Housing demand stayed weak. MBA reported a 1.2% weekly decline in mortgage applications for the week ending August 29, 2025.
The combined evidence is clear. Transportation swings drag the headline orders, yet non-transport orders continue to advance. Employers post fewer openings, but they do not accelerate separations. Mortgage demand remains soft.
Producers can focus on lines tied to ex-transport demand while monitoring aircraft and housing exposure. Managers can plan for slower hiring, since openings have fallen. The Beige Book scheduled today provides regional context for these conditions.
The official data describe a cooling edge with resilient cores. Firms that watch ex-transport order trends and pace hiring carefully can navigate with fewer surprises.
The Census Bureau said July factory orders fell 1.3% after June's 4.8% decline. Shipments rose 0.9%, and inventories increased 0.3%.
Factory new orders excluding transportation rose 0.6% in July. That steadiness excludes volatile aircraft and large vehicles.
The advance durable goods report adds key detail. Durable orders excluding transportation rose 1.1%, while durable orders excluding defense fell 2.5%. Transportation equipment weakness drove the headline drop.
Labor demand eased. BLS reported 7.181 million job openings in July, with 5.308 million hires and 5.289 million separations. The figures show slower recruitment with stable separations.
Housing demand stayed weak. MBA reported a 1.2% weekly decline in mortgage applications for the week ending August 29, 2025.
The combined evidence is clear. Transportation swings drag the headline orders, yet non-transport orders continue to advance. Employers post fewer openings, but they do not accelerate separations. Mortgage demand remains soft.
Producers can focus on lines tied to ex-transport demand while monitoring aircraft and housing exposure. Managers can plan for slower hiring, since openings have fallen. The Beige Book scheduled today provides regional context for these conditions.
The official data describe a cooling edge with resilient cores. Firms that watch ex-transport order trends and pace hiring carefully can navigate with fewer surprises.

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