Today's December factory orders data came as
a surprise to those expecting a whopping beat of expectations in the
aftermath of the superficial beat in the Durable data released last
week. Instead, the headline Factory Orders missed expectations of a
2.2% rise, growing just 1.8% in December, with the November data
revised lower from 0% to -0.3%. Worse news was that Factory Orders ex
the meaningless and volatile transportation number (see Dreamliner),
rose just 0.2% in the last month of 2012, after declining 0.2% in
November. Yet the ugliest number of the day was the year over year
change in factory orders ex transports, which is perhaps the best
coincident indicator of general business spending, and in line with the
non-defense capital goods ex aircraft series from the Durables report.
This posted a -0.2% nominal drop in December, the first decline since July. All
those hoping that the freeze on capital spending increases will thaw
any time soon, can put all such hopes back in carbonite where they
belong.