by Agency Reporter
United
States. services sector activity hit an 8-1/2-year high last month and
factory orders surged in June, bolstering expectations of solid economic
growth in the third quarter, Reuters reported on Tuesday.
The Institute for Supply Management said
on Tuesday its services index rose to 58.7, the highest level since
December 2005, from 56.0 in June, with new orders reaching their highest
level since August 2005.
A reading above 50 indicates expansion in the sector.
In a separate report, the Commerce
Department said orders for manufactured goods increased 1.1 per cent
after a 0.6 per cent decline in May. Economists had forecast new orders
received by factories rising only 0.6 per cent.
United State stocks held losses after
the unexpectedly better ISM and factory orders data, while the US dollar
extended gains against a basket of currencies. Yields on US 10-year and
30-year Treasuries touched session highs after the data.
Manufacturing is expanding strongly, helping to keep the economy on solid ground.
A survey last Friday showed new orders at the nation’s factories surged in July.
Automobile production is also
accelerating. But businesses amassed huge piles of stocks in the second
quarter, which they will probably need to work through before placing
more orders.
That could take some edge off factory
activity and overall economic growth. The economy grew at a 4.0 per cent
annual pace in the April-June period, and growth estimates for the
third quarter are currently around a three per cent rate.
Orders excluding the volatile
transportation category jumped 1.1 per cent in June, the largest
increase since July of last year, as bookings for primary metals,
machinery and electrical equipment, appliances and components rose.
Orders for computers and electronic products also increased.
Unfilled orders at factories rose 1.0 per cent. Order backlogs have increased in 14 of the last 15 months.
The Commerce Department also said orders
for durable goods, which are manufactured products expected to last
three years and more, rose a sturdy 1.7 per cent in June instead of the
0.7 per cent rise reported last month.
Durable goods orders excluding transportation surged 1.9 per cent instead of the previously reported 0.8 per cent advance.
Orders for non-defense capital goods
excluding aircraft — seen as a measure of business confidence and
spending plans — increased 3.3 per cent.
The so-called core capital goods data was previously reported to have increased 1.4 per cent.
The factory orders report showed
inventories rose 0.3 per cent in June, slowing from May’s 0.8 per cent
gain. Shipments rose 0.5 per cent after slipping 0.1 per cent in May.
The inventories-to-shipments ratio was unchanged at 1.31.
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