Orders for U.S. durable goods jumped 2.6% in March, but most of the increase was tied to new autos and passenger planes.
Headline durable goods orders rose in March but weakness in shipments may mean a softer-than-expected reading for US Q1 GDP ...
Real Advanced Durable Goods Shipments grew by 0.28% in March, with growth in Real Core Durable Goods Shipments accelerating ...
New orders for U.S.-made durable goods — products meant to last three years or more — increased 2.6% in March to $283.4 ...
The number of durable goods orders in the United States went up by 2.6% or $7.3 billion in March, landing at $283.4 billion, ...
The U.S. Census Bureau released its Monthly Advance Report on Durable Goods Manufacturers’ Shipments, Inventories, and Orders ...
Lakeland Industries, Inc. (LAKE), Chart Industries, Inc. (GTLS), Applied Industrial Technologies, Inc. (AIT) and Hubbell ...
New orders for manufactured durable goods in March, up two consecutive months, increased $7.3 billion or 2.6% to $283.4 ...
Uneventfully Weaker Regardless of Durable Goods Data Bonds were weaker in the overnight session on a combination of anxiety ...
Orders in the U.S. for goods made to last more than three years rose by slightly more than expected last month.
U.S. durable goods orders expand as expected, keeping Treasury yields near recent highs and the dollar strong. The data supports the view that the Fed won't cut interest rates until September. Durable ...