-Millan Mulraine, TD Securities
For the second consecutive month, orders for long lasting factory goods made in the United States fell, fresh figures from the US Census Bureau revealed on Wednesday. Excluding transportation equipment, new orders for durable goods fell 0.5% on a seasonally adjusted basis in June, compared to the previous month's downwardly revised drop of 0.4%, whereas market analysts expected core durable goods orders to advance 0.3% in the reported month. Overall orders for US manufactured durable goods decreased 4.0% in June, following last month's revised fall of 2.3% and falling behind the 1.1% drop forecast. Other data released by the Energy Information Association on Wednesday showed that US crude oil inventories added 1.7 million barrels in the week ended July 22, after the 2.3 million barrel fall registered in the previous seven days, while economic desks penciled in a decrease of 2.1 million barrels in the reported period.
The durable orders report stands in contrast to other recent data suggesting the US manufacturing sector stabilized in June. A Federal Reserve report showed manufacturing output was modestly above year-earlier levels in June.
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