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Macro Pulse highlights recent activity and events expected to affect the U.S. economy over the next 24 months. While the review is of the entire U.S. economy its particular focus is on developments affecting the Forest Products industry. Everyone with a stake in any level of the sector can benefit from
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Thursday, February 4, 2016

December 2015 Manufacturers’ Shipments, Inventories, and New & Unfilled Orders

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According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the value of manufactured-goods shipments decreased $6.8 billion or 1.4% to $467.0 billion in December. Shipments of durable goods decreased $5.1 billion or 2.1% to $236.1 billion, led by transportation equipment. Meanwhile, nondurable goods shipments decreased $1.7 billion or 0.8% to $230.9 billion, led by petroleum and coal products. Shipments of Wood jumped 3.0% while Paper edged down by 0.1%. 
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Inventories increased $1.0 billion or 0.2% to $642.3 billion. The inventories-to-shipments ratio was 1.38, up from 1.35 in November. Inventories of durable goods increased $1.9 billion or 0.5% to $397.6 billion, led by transportation equipment. Nondurable goods inventories decreased $1.0 billion or 0.4% to $244.7 billion, led by petroleum and coal products. Inventories of both Wood and Paper expanded by 0.1%. 
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New orders decreased $13.5 billion or 2.9% to $456.5 billion. Excluding transportation, new orders decreased 0.8% (and -5.4% YoY -- the 14th consecutive month of year-over-year contractions). Durable goods orders decreased $11.8 billion or 5.0% to $225.6 billion, led by transportation equipment. New orders for nondurable goods decreased $1.7 billion or 0.8% to $230.9 billion. New orders for non-defense capital goods excluding aircraft -- a proxy for business investment spending -- tumbled by 4.3% in December (-7.4% YoY). Business investment contracted on a YoY basis during every month of 2015.
Prior to July 2014, as can be seen in the graph above, real (inflation-adjusted) new orders had been essentially flat since early 2012, recouping on average 70% of the losses incurred since the beginning of the Great Recession. With July 2014’s transportation-led spike gradually receding in the rearview mirror, the recovery in new orders is back to just 50% of the ground given up in the Great Recession. 
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Unfilled durable-goods orders decreased $5.8 billion or 0.5% to $1,187.4 billion, led by transportation equipment. The unfilled orders-to-shipments ratio was 7.11, up from 6.94 in November. Real unfilled orders, which had been a good litmus test for sector growth, show a much different picture; in real terms, unfilled orders in June 2014 were back to 97% of their December 2008 peak. Real unfilled orders jumped to 122% of the prior peak in July 2014, thanks to the largest-ever batch of aircraft orders. Since then, however, real unfilled orders have moved mostly sideways and, in December, fell below the January 2010-to-June 2014 trend line.
The foregoing comments represent the general economic views and analysis of Delphi Advisors, and are provided solely for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse. They do not constitute a solicitation or recommendation regarding any investment.

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