Economists are among the most optimistic groups on the planet. Year in, year out they project improvements in growth.
So today, despite despite 4th Consecutive Decline in Factory Orders, it's no surprise that economists remain optimistic.
Orders to U.S. factories fell for a fourth straight month in November, with demand in a key category that signals business investment plans down for a third month.
The Commerce Department said Tuesday factory orders dropped 0.7 percent in November after a similar 0.7 percent fall in October. The November weakness came from decreases in demand for primary metals, industrial machinery and military aircraft.
A closely watched category that serves as a proxy for business investment spending dropped 0.5 percent in November, marking the longest stretch of weakness in this category since 2012.
Economists, however, remain optimistic that the drop in orders is a temporary soft patch and a stronger economy with increased consumer spending will trigger a rebound in demand in 2015.
New Order Details
The US Census Bureau Manufacturers' Shipments, Inventories and Orders Report for November 2014 shows new orders for manufactured goods are down for four consecutive months.
Highlights
Transportation Equipment
Auto Orders vs. Expectations
Automobile orders down 2.0% and heavy duty trucks down 4.4% are standouts. Nonetheless (from the first link) “Auto sales are expected to reach their highest level in a decade this year, bolstered by strong job gains and cheap gas.”